MIT Department of Anthropology

21A.504 Cultures of Computing

MIT Anthropology

Professor Héctor Beltrán
Fall 2021

TR 11AM - 12:30PM
Room 56-180

(Same subject as STS.086[J], WGS.276[J])

Examines computers anthropologically, as artifacts revealing the social orders and cultural practices that create them. Students read classic texts in computer science along with cultural analyses of computing history and contemporary configurations. Explores the history of automata, automation and capitalist manufacturing; cybernetics and WWII operations research; artificial intelligence and gendered subjectivity; robots, cyborgs, and artificial life; creation and commoditization of the personal computer; the growth of the Internet as a military, academic, and commercial project; hackers and gamers; technobodies and virtual sociality. Emphasis is placed on how ideas about gender and other social differences shape labor practices, models of cognition, hacking culture, and social media.

Cultures of Computing poster