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.
Funny Business: ”Silicon Valley” writer and co-producer Dan Lyons explains what‘s funny about tech culture
The TransHuman Code: Carlos Moreira imagines a human-centered technological future
Explaining AI: Kordel France's quest to create Ethical AI
Chris Wexler's Quest to Detoxify the Internet: AI and Krunam's Fight to Stop Human Trafficking
The Rise of the Ethical Hacker: The Wild, Wild West of Cybersecurity with Ted Harrington
Captivating Technology: How surveillance technology is taking over our prisons and our bodies
Network Technology: Dr. Ethel Mickey explains how networks structure the tech workforce
Millennial Action Technology: Steven Olikara talks tech and political activism for a new generation of leaders
Hard at Work: Sharla Alegria discusses inequality in the tech workforce
Digital Justice: Tech, policing, and the digital divide with Dr. Rashawn Ray and Dr. Nicol Turner Lee
Nintendo Nation: Jeff Ryan on Super Mario, gaming culture, and the ludology of play
Climate, Chemicals, Carcinogens, Cancer: Dr.Sandra Steingraber challenges the system
Natural Technology: Defining Technology in New Ways with Dr.Timothy Morton
Persons and Things: ThingLogix CTO Rob Rastovich talks human values and the Internet of Things
Body Technology: Disability and Technology Part 2 with Paralympian Ezra Frech
Body Technology: Disability and Technology Part 1 with Clayton Frech
Haley Pavone Reinvents the Heel: Fashion is an Ethics and Equity Issue
World Building:John Maeda designs the future of art, tech, and architecture
Dr. Mark Z. Jacobson Revolutionizes Climate Science: How tech can save the world from climate change and what YOU can do to help
Virtually Human: Living in Jaron Lanier’s virtual reality
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