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# | This space is for adding ideas for the 2020 [[Sociotechnocanonicon]]. | ||
=== Proposal === | |||
We'll start with these classics: | |||
;[Week 1 / of July 6]: Elinor Ostrom's Governing the Commons (first half: Preface, Chapters 1-3) | |||
* Discussion leader(s): | |||
* People attending: sohyeon | |||
;[Week 2 / of July 13]: Elinor Ostrom's Governing the Commons (second half: Chapters 4-6) | |||
* Discussion leader(s): | |||
* People attending: sohyeon | |||
;[Week 3 / of July 20]: Yochai Benkler's "Coase's Penguin" and "Sharing Nicely" | |||
* Discussion leader(s): | |||
* People attending: sohyeon | |||
;[Week 4 / of July 27]: Dorothy Singer and Tracey Revenson's A Piaget Primer: How a Child Thinks (first half: Preface, Chapters 1-4) | |||
* Discussion leader(s): | |||
* People attending: Floor | |||
;[Week 5 / of August 3]: Dorothy Singer and Tracey Revenson's A Piaget Primer: How a Child Thinks (second half: Chapters 5-8) | |||
* Discussion leader(s): | |||
* People attending: Floor | |||
;[Week 6 / of August 10]: Francesca Polleta's Freedom is an Endless Meeting (first half: Preface, Chapters 1-4) and Jo Freeman's "Tyranny of Structurelessness" | |||
* Discussion leader(s): | |||
* People attending: sohyeon, Floor | |||
;[Week 7 / of August 17]: Francesca Polleta's Freedom is an Endless Meeting (second half: Chapters 5-8) | |||
* Discussion leader(s): | |||
* People attending: sohyeon, Floor | |||
;[Week 8 / of August 24]: TBD | |||
;[Week 9 / of August 31]: TBD | |||
=== New suggestions go here=== | |||
* Ruha Benjamin, The New Jim Code | |||
* Sasha Costanza-Chock, Design Justice | |||
* Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples - Linda Tuhiwai Smith | |||
* A People’s History of Computing in the United States - Joy Lisi Rankin | |||
* Digitizing Race: Visual Cultures of the Internet (Lisa Nakamura) | |||
===Top Ideas from the past?=== | |||
* Data Feminism | |||
* Axelrod | |||
* Piaget | |||
* Coding Freedom | |||
===Lessons from 2019 Instantiation=== | |||
* Deciding on book/s needs to happen earlier so that we can get the word out and folks can plan | |||
* Intersecting reading choices and discussion leaders earlier would also be helpful | |||
===Structural Ideas from Post-Summer 2019=== | |||
* Part of a broader "Samba school" program that CDSC might operate as over each summer? | |||
* What is the periodicity of the STC? 3 years? 4 years? | |||
===Reading Ideas From 2019 Planning=== | |||
* Axelrod's [[:wikipedia:The Evolution of Cooperation]]. A more controversial suggestion would be Kropotkin's [[:wikipedia:Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution]] —<b>[[User:Benjamin Mako Hill|<font color="#C40099">m</font><font color="#600099">a</font><font color="#2D0399">k</font><font color="#362365">o</font>]][[User_talk:Benjamin Mako Hill|<font color="#000000">๛</font>]]</b> | |||
* Claude Shannon (or at least someone else's summary of information theory) [[User:Aaronshaw|Aaronshaw]] ([[User talk:Aaronshaw|talk]]) 16:38, 7 May 2019 (EDT) | |||
* Hayek (on information) [[User:Aaronshaw|Aaronshaw]] ([[User talk:Aaronshaw|talk]]) 16:39, 7 May 2019 (EDT) | |||
* If we want to read something ecological I would pick "organizations evolving" by Reuf and Aldrich. It may be a bit too high level and its kind of a textbook. I'd also be excited to do Marx, Weber, Durkheim. Another idea for a social theory book is "Constructing Social Theories" by Stinchcomb. [[User:Groceryheist|Groceryheist]] ([[User talk:Groceryheist|talk]]) 18:24, 5 June 2019 (EDT) | |||
* Giddens, A. (1984). The constitution of society: outline of the theory of structuration. University of California Press. | |||
* Something by Wanda Orlikowski [[User:Sneha|Sneha]] ([[User talk:Sneha|talk]]) 11:49, 6 June 2019 (EDT) | |||
* Jo Freeman's [https://www.jofreeman.com/joreen/tyranny.htm Tyranny of Structurelessness] [[User:Sneha|Sneha]] ([[User talk:Sneha|talk]]) 11:49, 6 June 2019 (EDT) (this is very short and important! there's no excuse not to do it —<b>[[User:Benjamin Mako Hill|<font color="#C40099">m</font><font color="#600099">a</font><font color="#2D0399">k</font><font color="#362365">o</font>]][[User_talk:Benjamin Mako Hill|<font color="#000000">๛</font>]]</b> 20:44, 5 June 2020 (CEST)) | |||
* Jessica Nembhard's Collective Courage: A History of African American Cooperative Economic Thought and Practice [[User:Sneha|Sneha]] ([[User talk:Sneha|talk]]) 11:49, 6 June 2019 (EDT) | |||
* Francesa Polletta's [https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/F/bo3682810.html Freedom is an Endless Meeting] [[User:Sneha|Sneha]] ([[User talk:Sneha|talk]]) 11:49, 6 June 2019 (EDT) (This is a new classic and and I'd really like to do it. —<b>[[User:Benjamin Mako Hill|<font color="#C40099">m</font><font color="#600099">a</font><font color="#2D0399">k</font><font color="#362365">o</font>]][[User_talk:Benjamin Mako Hill|<font color="#000000">๛</font>]]</b>) | |||
===Reading Ideas From Post-Summer 2019=== | |||
* Castells (or, perhaps, Phil Howard on Castells, with some auxiliary reading) [[User:Kaylea|Kaylea]] ([[User talk:Kaylea|talk]]) 15:52, 13 November 2019 (EST) | |||
* Exit, Voice, and Loyalty (Hirschmann) [[User:Kaylea|Kaylea]] ([[User talk:Kaylea|talk]]) 15:52, 13 November 2019 (EST) | |||
* The Sciences of the Artificial, HA Simon. "best known for concepts of bounded rationality and satisficing" [[User:Kaylea|Kaylea]] ([[User talk:Kaylea|talk]]) 15:48, 8 January 2020 (EST) | |||
* Piaget (or, someone covering Piaget) in keeping with last year's pattern of having a reading about education [[User:Kaylea|Kaylea]] ([[User talk:Kaylea|talk]]) 15:52, 13 November 2019 (EST) (Mako suggests the [https://www.amazon.com/Piaget-Primer-Child-Thinks-Revised/dp/0452275652 A Piaget Primer: How a Child Thinks] by Dorothy Singer and Tracey Revenson) [[User:Kaylea|Kaylea]] ([[User talk:Kaylea|talk]]) | |||
* Gabrielle Tard (Mako mentioned in orgcomm class) | |||
* Kollock, Peter and Marc Smith. 1999. [https://www.amazon.com/Communities-Cyberspace-Peter-Kollock/dp/0415191408 Communities in Cyberspace]. London: Routledge. | |||
* [https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/data-feminism Data Feminism] by Catherine D'Ignazio and Lauren F. Klein (—<b>[[User:Benjamin Mako Hill|<font color="#C40099">m</font><font color="#600099">a</font><font color="#2D0399">k</font><font color="#362365">o</font>]][[User_talk:Benjamin Mako Hill|<font color="#000000">๛</font>]]</b>) | |||
* [https://www.amazon.com/Coding-Freedom-Ethics-Aesthetics-Hacking/dp/0691144613 Coding Freedom: The Ethics and Aesthetics of Hacking] by Gabriella Coleman (—<b>[[User:Benjamin Mako Hill|<font color="#C40099">m</font><font color="#600099">a</font><font color="#2D0399">k</font><font color="#362365">o</font>]][[User_talk:Benjamin Mako Hill|<font color="#000000">๛</font>]]</b>) |