<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:syn="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/" xmlns="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/">




    



<channel rdf:about="http://editors.cis-india.org/search_rss">
  <title>Centre for Internet and Society</title>
  <link>http://editors.cis-india.org</link>
  
  <description>
    
            These are the search results for the query, showing results 11 to 12.
        
  </description>
  
  
  
  
  <image rdf:resource="http://editors.cis-india.org/logo.png"/>

  <items>
    <rdf:Seq>
        
            <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://editors.cis-india.org/raw/histories-of-the-internet/blogs/rewiring-bodies/unpacking-technology-beginnings"/>
        
        
            <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://editors.cis-india.org/a2k/projects/a-series-of-podcasts-on-sofware-patents/Justice%20and%20Differenceversion.doc"/>
        
    </rdf:Seq>
  </items>

</channel>


    <item rdf:about="http://editors.cis-india.org/raw/histories-of-the-internet/blogs/rewiring-bodies/unpacking-technology-beginnings">
    <title>Unpacking technology - beginnings</title>
    <link>http://editors.cis-india.org/raw/histories-of-the-internet/blogs/rewiring-bodies/unpacking-technology-beginnings</link>
    <description>
        &lt;b&gt;This is a work-in-progress that seeks to inaugurate a field of critical technology studies with the women-technology relationship as a unique entry point of investigation.&lt;/b&gt;
        
&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This is a work-in-progress that
seeks to inaugurate a field of &lt;em&gt;critical
technology studies&lt;/em&gt; with the women-technology relationship as a unique entry
point of investigation. To this end, it will&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;&lt;li&gt;lay down the historical and geo-political
contexts for the use of technology in India&lt;/li&gt;&lt;li&gt;engage with existing concepts like context,
postcoloniality, organicity, and exclusion that have come into use with the
critical responses to technology in India&lt;/li&gt;&lt;li&gt;
offer a conceptual vocabulary that explains the
tools being used to engage with the question, and&lt;/li&gt;&lt;li&gt;suggest strategies for testing of the hypotheses
being set forward in the paper, as well as parallel modes of generating
‘critical debate’ on them. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&lt;/ul&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This is in order to contribute,
eventually, to a specific unpacking of the concept of technology that will in
turn help evolve a more robust response to it than has been our understanding
so far.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h3&gt;A few questions to
begin with&lt;/h3&gt;
&lt;p&gt;What are the conditions that drive
such an approach? Since the time of Nehruvian socialism, the language of the
relationship between human and technological elements in India has changed
considerably. While this has partly to do with more and more constituencies
asking for attention in the industrial polity and development frameworks, it
also has to do with changing perceptions of technology itself. Thus it is that strongly positive and dynamic images of technology
(to be found in the Indian scientific and medical establishments) as well as
strongly critical positions (anti-development stances, eco-feminist movements,
postcolonial theorizing) reside side-by-side in the discourse around technology
in India, in a manner that appears to be the particular characteristic of
postcolonial societies today.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The
effects or parallels of such criticality, however, are not limited to ‘civil
society’ positions, meaning that it is not a simple state-versus-the-people
problem. A cursory examination of development scenarios in the area of
reproductive health, for instance, yields evidence of a situation where state
population policy dictates, as part of infrastructural requirements, an
increasing use of technology, while at the same time insisting on an attention
to women as repositories of “indigenous systems” in order to “fill in gaps in
manpower [that can access or use technology] at village levels” (National
Population Policy 2000). The state also encourages discussions of increased
entry of women as professionals into academic technological institutions. In
cohort with the critiques, then, there are approximately four responses to
technology that are in evidence today across state and civil society positions
- presence, access, inclusion, resistance. The presence of women as agents of
technological change, improved access for women to the fruits of technology,
the inclusion of women as a constituency that must be specially provided for by
technological amendments, and a recognition of technology’s ills particularly
for women.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;My
central suggestion is of a connection between all of these seemingly disparate
responses. For one, they espouse a vision of technology as discrete, bounded,
and separate from the human, woman being a ‘case’ thereof. Following such a
vision of technology as instrument or tool separate from human agency, and the
necessary corollary of pristine humanness, in postcolonial theorization
aggravated into empirical subalternity, the debates seem to hover endlessly over
technology being beneficial, devastating, or a judicious mixture of the two.
Complementarily, the pre-technological appears free of, or lacking in, the
instrumentality of technology; “everyday technologies” seem to offer respite in
the shape of an embeddedness in community; at the very least, they appear to
possess the mythicity, the poiesis, that critics so wistfully regret the
absence of in modern science. And these two – everyday technologies and the
pre-technological, in their common possession of such poiesis, such anarchy,
seem organically tied and a natural vantage point for a critique of the modern
technological.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;What &lt;em&gt;obviously&lt;/em&gt; happens to this understanding of technology, and to this
version of critique, with the arrival of digital, particularly internet
technologies? It may be stated fairly accurately that internet technologies are
&lt;em&gt;employed&lt;/em&gt; by state agendas on the same
principle as the above, namely, as instruments of access, information, or
development. In the case of internet medical technologies, however, once we
shift our attention from the internet as medical data bases to systems like
Immersion medical simulators, robotic surgical systems, or robot surgeons, we
find a curious (some would say deadly) shift. Representation is no longer what
is at stake, so that these technologies are no longer aiming at providing
extensions or voice to the human. What is happening, rather, is &lt;em&gt;simulation&lt;/em&gt;,
in a movement, as Donna Haraway puts it, from old hierarchical dominations to a
new informatics of domination. While the critiques have mostly hitherto
concentrated on the question of access on the one hand or of organicity on the
other, that is, asking for more (inclusion) or asking for less (withdrawal),
therefore, an unpacking of the word or concept ‘technology’ itself has also
somewhat forced itself to attention in this scenario. Old wirings of women-technology where one is independent of
the other have become circumspect with evidence, at least on the surface, of
overdetermined relationships of wo‘m’an-machine-nature.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;I see the surface complications
brought in by these technologies as a &lt;em&gt;symptom
of the malaise of the old understanding&lt;/em&gt; rather than as a new development.
And it is in this context that I propose a further, and more adequate, &lt;em&gt;unpacking of the concept of technology &lt;/em&gt;through a specific understanding of internet
technologies. More specifically, I would suggest an &lt;em&gt;unpacking of the relationship of technology to its constituencies&lt;/em&gt;,
of which I concentrate on one, namely women. What I am proposing, therefore, is
the development of a field that I will tentatively call critical technology
studies – a field that does not merely name each new technology as example, but
brings back a study of each to enrich the originary understanding of
technology. I begin from one node - women-technology. I start this
investigation with a series of questions -
once we give up on the wiring
between women-technology that populates mainstream positions as well as the
critiques, which also means a giving up on the representational relationship
between women and technology, how does one speak at all of gender and
technology? Of gender and science? Gender and development? Further, the
relationship, of wo‘m’an-machine-nature, an overdetermined relationship, &lt;em&gt;need not necessarily be a symbiotic one&lt;/em&gt;.
Once this is taken into account, how does one talk of the difficulties of
technology? The devastating effects? If we shift our expectations of technology
from the beneficial or the symbiotic to the &lt;em&gt;arbitrary&lt;/em&gt;,
and moreover, once we have refused to talk of nature or pre-capitalism as
pristine or prior entity, what of the critique?&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Let us say, then, that I seek to
investigate afresh the nature of the relationship women-technology that may
help articulate a response to the ‘problem of technology’, without turning it
into either a monster or a benevolent entity. This would involve understanding
control strategies which, as Haraway puts it again, may have more visibility on
border regions rather than as disturbing the integrity of ‘natural objects’ –
women and their bodies among them. This would involve a shift from articulating
better politics, and policies, of representation, to understanding simulatory
strategies of new internet technologies. And this would involve, putting these
two together, recovering not a pristine narrative of women’s experience –
homogenous or varied, but an attention, instead to its possible aporeticity.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;

        &lt;p&gt;
        For more details visit &lt;a href='http://editors.cis-india.org/raw/histories-of-the-internet/blogs/rewiring-bodies/unpacking-technology-beginnings'&gt;http://editors.cis-india.org/raw/histories-of-the-internet/blogs/rewiring-bodies/unpacking-technology-beginnings&lt;/a&gt;
        &lt;/p&gt;
    </description>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>asha</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>

    
        <dc:subject>histories of internet in India</dc:subject>
    
    
        <dc:subject>rewiring bodies</dc:subject>
    

   <dc:date>2008-10-31T09:47:08Z</dc:date>
   <dc:type>Blog Entry</dc:type>
   </item>


    <item rdf:about="http://editors.cis-india.org/a2k/projects/a-series-of-podcasts-on-sofware-patents/Justice%20and%20Differenceversion.doc">
    <title>Justice and Difference</title>
    <link>http://editors.cis-india.org/a2k/projects/a-series-of-podcasts-on-sofware-patents/Justice%20and%20Differenceversion.doc</link>
    <description>
        &lt;b&gt;This is a version of the paper by Prof. Shefali Moitra that formed the basis for her talk at CIS on November 14, 2008.&lt;/b&gt;
        
        &lt;p&gt;
        For more details visit &lt;a href='http://editors.cis-india.org/a2k/projects/a-series-of-podcasts-on-sofware-patents/Justice%20and%20Differenceversion.doc'&gt;http://editors.cis-india.org/a2k/projects/a-series-of-podcasts-on-sofware-patents/Justice%20and%20Differenceversion.doc&lt;/a&gt;
        &lt;/p&gt;
    </description>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>asha</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>


   <dc:date>2008-12-05T10:28:20Z</dc:date>
   <dc:type>File</dc:type>
   </item>




</rdf:RDF>
