Welcome to the final episode of the "Technically Human" season!
We’re ending the season with an episode of the 22 lessons on ethics and technology series, with a conversation featuring Dr. John Williams about the global imagination of tech.
Dr. John Williams is a professor of English Literature at Yale University. His work is focused on international histories of technological/media innovation and the perceived difference of racial and cultural otherness. His book, The Buddha in the Machine: Art, Technology, and The Meeting of East and West (Yale University Press, 2014), examines the role of technological discourse in representations of Asian/American aesthetics in late-nineteenth and twentieth-century film and literature. The book won the 2015 Harry Levin Prize from the American Comparative Literature Association. In the conversation, we explore the diverse international histories of technological innovation and how otherness and differences have been constructed across contexts and time.
The “22 Lessons in Ethical Technology” series is co-sponsored by the National Science Foundation and the Cal Poly Strategic Research Initiative Grant Award. The show is written, hosted, and produced by me, Deb Donig, with production support from Matthew Harsh and Elise St. John. Thanks to Jake Garner and Emma Zumbro for production coordination. Our head of research for this series is Sakina Nuruddin. Our editor is Carrie Caulfield Arick. Art by Desi Aleman.
*From the Archives*: Tech, democracy, human rights, and the urgent crisis in Sudan
Compliance and Governance in the Age of Tech
Returning the Power of AI to the People
Indigeneity in the Digital Age
Technology and Genocide: What the Holocaust can tell us about perils of technological utopianism
Instituting Integrity: The rise of the integrity worker collective
How We Breathe: how technology is changing approaches to ventilation
Technically Human Rights: How technologies are changing the state of human rights
The Global Technological Imaginary: Sci-Fi, Tech, and the Ethics of Representation
Zoom Fatigue: Distance Learning and Social Engagement in the Age of Social Distancing
Data Feminism
The Threshold: Leading in the Age of AI
The Ethics of the Blockchain
Digital Democracy: How Tech Shapes Democratic Participation and Social Justice
Computing Women: Gender Disparity in STEM Education
Human First AI
Science for the 21st Century: Understanding Systems Biology
The Diversity Challenge: Race, gender, and how the histories of medicine and technology got made
The Ethic of Life
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