Reading list (Gender, Gender and Technology)
De Beauvoir, S. (2012). The second sex. Vintage.
Daly, M. (2016). Gyn/ecology: The metaethics of radical feminism. Beacon Press.
Cockburn, C. (1986). Women and technology: opportunity is not enough. In The changing experience of employment (pp. 173-187). Palgrave Macmillan UK.
Haraway, D. (2006). A cyborg manifesto: Science, technology, and socialist-feminism in the late 20th century. The international handbook of virtual learning environments, 117-158.
Gergen, M. M. E. (1988). Feminist thought and the structure of knowledge. New York University Press.
Sandra Harding. Feminism and Methodology. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1987.
Cockburn, C. 2000. The circuit of technology: Gender, identity, and power, in Electronic Media and Technoculture, Ed. J. T. Caldwell. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. (originally published in 1992).
________. 1999. Caught in the wheels, in The Social Shaping of Technology, 2nd Ed.D. Mackenzie & J. Wajcman (Eds.). Buckingham: Open University Press. (article originally published in 1983.)
Grint, K., & Woolgar, S. (1995). On some failures of nerve in constructivist and feminist analyses of technology. Science, Technology, & Human Values, 20(3), 286-310.
Onnrod, S. (1995). Feminist sociology and methodology: Leaky black boxes in gender/technology relations. The gender-technology relation: Contemporary theory and research, 31-47.
Suchman, L. (1993). Working relations of technology production and use. Computer Supported Cooperative Work, 2(1-2), 21-39.
Faulkner, W. (2000). The power and the pleasure? A research agenda for “making gender stick” to engineers. Science, Technology, & Human Values, 25(1), 87-119.
Webster, J. (2014). Shaping women's work: Gender, employment and information technology. Routledge.
Rosser, S. V. (2005). Through the lenses of feminist theory: Focus on women and information technology. Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies, 26(1), 1-23.
Wajcman, J. (2010). Feminist theories of technology. Cambridge journal of economics, 34(1), 143-152.
Wajcman, J. (2007). From women and technology to gendered technoscience. Information, Community and Society, 10(3), 287-298.
Shiva, V. (2007). Bioprospecting as sophisticated biopiracy. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 32(2), 307-313.
Sherry, T. (1995). Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet. NY etc.: cop.
Cherny, L. (1996). Wired women: Gender and new realities in cyberspace. Avalon Publishing Group.
Halberstam, J. (1991). Automating gender: Postmodern feminism in the age of the intelligent machine. Feminist Studies, 17(3), 439-460.
Harding, S. (2016). Whose science? Whose knowledge: Thinking from women's lives. Cornell University Press.
Kramarae, C. (Ed.). (2004). Technology and women's voices: Keeping in touch. Routledge.
Adam, A. (2006). Artificial knowing: Gender and the thinking machine. Routledge.
Keep, C. (1997). The Cultural Work of the Type-Writer Girl. Victorian Studies, 40(3), 401-426.
Benhabib, S., & Cornell, D. (1987). Feminism as Critique: Essays on the Politics of Gender in Late-Capitalist Society. University of Pennsylvania.
Ensmenger, Nathan. (2010). Making programming masculine. Gender codes: Why women are leaving computing, 115-42.
Akera, A. (2000). Engineers or managers? The systems analysis of electronic data processing in the federal bureaucracy. Systems, experts, and computers: The systems approach in management and engineering, world war II and after, 191-220.
Bijker, W. E., Hughes, T. P., Pinch, T., & Douglas, D. G. (2012). The social construction of technological systems: New directions in the sociology and history of technology. MIT press.
Trauth, E. M. (2011). Rethinking Gender and MIS for the Twenty‐First Century.
Castells, M. (2011). The rise of the network society: The information age: Economy, society, and culture (Vol. 1). John Wiley & Sons.
Rapp, R. (1999). Testing women, testing the fetus. The Social Impact of Amniocentesis in America. New York7 Routledge.
Suchman, L. A. (1987). Plans and situated actions: The problem of human-machine communication. Cambridge university press.
Tavris, C. (1993). The mismeasure of woman. Feminism & Psychology, 3(2), 149-168.
Wajcman, J. (1991). Feminism confronts technology. Penn State Press.
Winner, L. (1993). Upon opening the black box and finding it empty: Social constructivism and the philosophy of technology. Science, Technology, & Human Values, 18(3), 362-378.
Berg, A. J., & Lie, M. (1995). Feminism and constructivism: Do artifacts have gender?. Science, Technology, & Human Values, 20(3), 332-351.
Oudshoorn, N., Rommes, E., & Stienstra, M. (2004). Configuring the user as everybody: Gender and design cultures in information and communication technologies. Science, Technology, & Human Values, 29(1), 30-63.
Oakley, A. (1987). From walking wombs to test-tube babies. Reproductive technologies: Gender, motherhood and medicine, 36-56.
Lie, M. (1995). Technology and masculinity: The case of the computer. European Journal of Women's Studies, 2(3), 379-394.
Bourdieu, P., & Wacquant, L. J. (1992). An invitation to reflexive sociology. University of Chicago press.
Hekman, S. (1997). Truth and method: Feminist standpoint theory revisited. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 22(2), 341-365.
Trauth, E. M., & Jessup, L. M. (2000). Understanding computer-mediated discussions: positivist and interpretive analyses of group support system use. MIs Quarterly, 43-79.
Woodfield, R. (2002). Woman and information systems development: not just a pretty (inter) face?. Information Technology & People, 15(2), 119-138.
Hi,
I am planning to do a research on gendered electronic record management system as part of my thesis (Management in information systems).
I have education background in information science (engineer) and looking for reading suggestions (basic, essential readings along with the advance reading suggestions) to start with.
Once I have received response from multiple people, I will collate and post final list here for the benefit of all.
Thanks