Computing as Writing
By (Author) Daniel Punday
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
1st March 2016
United States
General
Non Fiction
Information theory
Media studies
Information architecture
802.85
Paperback
232
Width 140mm, Height 216mm, Spine 25mm
This book examines the common metaphor that equates computing and writing, tracing it from the naming of devices (notebook computers) through the design of user interfaces (the desktop) to how we describe the work of programmers (writing code). Computing as Writing ponders both the implications and contradictions of the metaphor.
During the past decade, analysis of digital media honed its focus on particular hardware and software platforms. Daniel Punday argues that scholars should, instead, embrace both the power and the fuzziness of the writing metaphor as it relates to computingwhich isnt simply a set of techniques or a collection of technologies but also an idea that resonates throughout contemporary culture. He addresses a wide array of subjects, including film representations of computing (Desk Set, The Social Network), Neal Stephensons famous open source manifesto, J. K. Rowlings legal battle with a fan site, the sorting of digital libraries, subscription services like Netflix, and the Apple versus Google debate over openness in computing.
Punday shows how contemporary authors are caught between traditional notions of writerly authority and computings emphasis on doing things with writing. What does it mean to be a writer today Is writing code for an app equivalent to writing a novel Should we change how we teach writing Pundays answers to these questions and others are original and refreshing, and push the study of digital media in productive new directions.
"Daniel Punday traces the ideaan idea that he shows to be pervasivethat to control computers we typically engage in a sort of writing. This insight informs our understanding of computation in culture and also enriches our notion of writing generally. It should, additionally, help non-programmer humanists see that, since they have learned to write, they can learn to do that specific type of writing that is known as programming."Nick Montfort, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
"In a world in which the distinction between writing and computing is increasingly blurred, Punday's volume raises some intriguing questions and offers some new ways to look at writing and computing."CHOICE
Daniel Punday is professor of English at Purdue University Calumet. He is the author of several books, including Five Strands of Fictionality: The Institutional Construction of Contemporary American Fiction and Writing at the Limit: The Novel in the New Media Ecology.