Ellison, Katherine (Author)
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.
...More
Article
Hodges, Andrew;
(2012)
Beyond Turing's Machines
(/isis/citation/CBB001320475/)
Article
Stillman, Robert E.;
(1995)
Invitation and engagement: Ideology and Wilkin's philosophical language
(/isis/citation/CBB000030400/)
Article
Lewis, R.;
(2002)
The Publication of John Wilkins's Essay (1668): Some Contextual Considerations
(/isis/citation/CBB000201152/)
Book
Beeley, Philip;
Scriba, Christoph J.;
(2012)
Correspondence of John Wallis (1616--1703). Vol. III, October 1668--December 1673
(/isis/citation/CBB001200116/)
Article
Ratcliff, J. R.;
(2007)
Samuel Morland and His Calculating Machines c. 1666: The Early Career of a Courtier--Inventor in Restoration London
(/isis/citation/CBB000771303/)
Article
Mordechai Feingold;
(2020)
An Anatomy of a Religio-Scientific Polemic: The Wilkins-Ross Controversy Revisited
(/isis/citation/CBB973483524/)
Book
Hodges, Andrew;
(2000)
Alan Turing: the Enigma
(/isis/citation/CBB000110152/)
Article
Reed, Joel;
(1989)
Restoration and repression: The language projects of the Royal Society
(/isis/citation/CBB000065563/)
Book
William Poole;
(2017)
John Wilkins (1614-1672): New Essays
(/isis/citation/CBB740319556/)
Book
Copeland, B. Jack;
(2012)
Turing: Pioneer of the Information Age
(/isis/citation/CBB001253045/)
Chapter
Field, J. V.;
(2009)
British Cryptanalysis: The Breaking of “Fish” Traffic
(/isis/citation/CBB000960225/)
Book
McKay, Sinclair;
(2010)
The Secret Life of Bletchley Park: The History of the Wartime Codebreaking Centre by the Men and Women Who Were There
(/isis/citation/CBB001212751/)
Book
Turing, Sara;
(2012)
Alan M. Turing
(/isis/citation/CBB001251444/)
Thesis
Lausa, Dawn E.;
(2009)
Descartes' Daughters: Thinking-Machines and the Emergence of Posthuman Complexity
(/isis/citation/CBB001562841/)
Article
Ogilvie, Brian W.;
(2012)
Attending to Insects: Francis Willughby and John Ray
(/isis/citation/CBB001251457/)
Article
Gauvin, Jean-François;
(2006)
Artisans, Machines, and Descartes's Organon
(/isis/citation/CBB000651756/)
Book
Richard John Sorrenson;
(2013)
Perfect Mechanics: Instrument Makers at the Royal Society of London in the Eighteenth Century
(/isis/citation/CBB602058939/)
Article
Francesco Luzzini;
(2011)
L’edizione elettronica del testo scientifico d’età moderna: criteri, problemi, prospettive di ricerca
(/isis/citation/CBB132120906/)
Article
Büttner, Jochen;
(2008)
Big Wheel Keep on Turning
(/isis/citation/CBB000931288/)
Article
Gerhold, Dorian;
(2009)
The Hallen Family, Iron Platers and Frying Pan Makers
(/isis/citation/CBB001231645/)
Be the first to comment!