Article ID: CBB001421598

Digital Scholarship as Handwork and Brainwork: An Early Modern History of Cryptography (2013)

unapi

The first computing machines, invented by Samuel Morland during the seventeenth century, were distributed as part of a rhetorical project underway at the time that was orchestrated by Royal Society members like Morland and John Wilkins. Products of both brainwork, or creative innovation, and handwork, or craft production, these machines reconnect early modern scholars with the historical meaning of "digitization" as the manipulation of media with the hand and challenge assumptions about the differences between humanities scholarship and computer science scholarship. Through their pocket-sized devices and, I examine, their cryptography manuals, they sought not only to reconceive the composition and reading processes as digital, or always involving the hand, but also to create a respected, collaborative place for the sciences and technical arts in both higher education and the public imagination. Both were particularly interested in cryptography and its multimodal, cross-disciplinary potential for the global sharing of knowledge for England's national intellectual and economic status and position that discipline as a liberal art. However, Wilkins's advocacy for richer disciplinary collaboration across the liberal arts, sciences, and technical arts set into motion a history of division that today's digital humanists must navigate in order to develop purposeful online early modern scholarship.

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Authors & Contributors
Hodges, Andrew P.
Turing, Sara
Stillman, Robert E.
Sorrenson, Richard J.
Scriba, Christoph J.
Reed, Joel
Journals
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
Galilæana: Journal of Galilean Studies
Philosophical Readings
Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture
Science
International Journal for the History of Engineering and Technology
Publishers
Oxford University Press
Docent Press
Syracuse University
Walker & Company
Brill
Aurum
Concepts
Computers and computing
Codes and cryptography
Machines
Mathematics
Crafts and craftspeople
Biographies
People
Wilkins, John
Turing, Alan Mathison
Descartes, René
Vallisneri, Antonio
Willughby, Francis
Wiener, Norbert
Time Periods
17th century
Early modern
20th century, early
18th century
20th century
Modern
Places
Great Britain
England
London (England)
British Isles
Institutions
Royal Society of London
Oxford University
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