[Flashlab seminar] Dr. Apolline Taillandier (University of Cambridge) Thursday, March 13 (4-5:30 p.m CET) "An 'epistemological Perestroika': Constructionists and the end of the Cold War"
Hello all,
We are pleased to introduce the last session of the Flashlab seminar's quarterly cycle, "Artificial Intelligence & History". The session will be held online on Thursday, March 13 (4-5:30 p.m CET) and will feature a talk by Apolline Taillandier, Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Cambridge (Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence, Department of Politics and International Studies, Newnham College) and the University of Bonn (Center for Science and Thought) entitled:
"An 'epistemological Perestroika': Constructionists and the end of the Cold War"
Abstract: Historians of neoliberalism have recently analysed the conservative elements within libertarianism, a doctrine centred on individual rights and commonly described as the prevailing political language of Silicon Valley technofuturism (Deudney 2020; Jensen 2022; Slobodian 2023). This story sits well within a common scholarly narrative tracing the politics of computers from a bureaucratic and military disciplinary project to an anti-authoritarian tool, to the epitome of a neo-reactionary tech industry reinforcing dominant racial and gender orders (Agar 2003; Turner 2006; Fourcade and Healy 2024). In this paper, I shed light on feminist and decolonial elements within technolibertarianism. Focusing on constructionism, an approach to computer education advocated notably by engineers at MIT during the 1980s and 1990s (Harel and Papert 1991), I explain how it can be understood as a variant of libertarian social theory, and I describe two of its key tenets: its vision of society, and its vision of global order.
First, constructionists aimed to change school curricula through the introduction of computers but also to abolish authority and transform social relations. Informed by cybernetic models of decentralised organisation and feminist epistemologies, alternative computer design would break with homogenising and oppressive pedagogies, turn teachers from state technicians into consultants, and enable individuals with different abilities, genders and ways of knowing to flourish. Instead of an essentially hierarchical or rigidly classified order, the classroom was closer to a spontaneous market enabling common rules to emerge from interactions between computers, children and teachers. As such, it offered a model of the future society and a space for experimenting with computer cultures. Second, constructionists supported a form of market globalism. The battle for the future of education aimed to expand computerised education worldwide but also to undermine the rampant centralism in the US school system, a vast network of institutions more akin to a state bureaucracy than to the society of physicists (Papert 1990). Looking to the fall of the Soviet Union as well as to the end of Apartheid in South Africa, constructionists sought to change knowledge production globally. Rather than the final victory of liberal values, the end of the Cold War promised to destabilise state structures and the underlying hegemony of central planning.
All practical information (such as the visioconference link) will be communicated through the seminar's mailing list. To subscribe: flashlab@framalistes.org
Alternatively, please feel free to reach out directly to get the connection link (assia.wirth@universite-paris-saclay.fr)
The seminars next quarterly cycle will focus on contemporary issues in artificial intelligence. The first session will be held in French on Thursday 3 April (4pm-5.30pm), with Hlne Herman (CEMS, EHESS, INSP) for a presentation entitled: La fabrique des normes harmonises sur lintelligence artificielle : diffrents types dacteurs lpreuve de la bureaucratie europenne .
The seminars full programme is available on our website: https://flashlabinfo.wordpress.com/les-seances/
Looking forward to seeing many of you,
Valentin Goujon & Assia Wirth
Assia Wirth PhD candidate Inria & ENS Paris-Saclay EASST's Eurograd mailing list -- eurograd-easst.net@lists.easst.net Archive: https://lists.easst.net/hyperkitty/list/eurograd-easst.net@lists.easst.net/ Edit your delivery settings there using Account dropdown, Mailman settings. Website: https://easst.net/easst_eurograd/ Meet us on Mastodon: https://assemblag.es/@easst Or X: https://twitter.com/STSeasst
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