Home Computer: Digitalization and the Domestic
Overview
Since October 2020, the project has been dealing with the domestication of the computer from a media studies perspective. It examines the genesis of the computerization of the home at the interface of personal and home computers and thus for the period of the 1970-1990s. The question is under which historical conditions and with which effects the computer becomes part of the domestic ensemble. The project takes an interdisciplinary approach consisting of design history, environmental thinking inspired by actor-network theory (ANT), and discourse analysis. The arrangement of the living space and the computer are conceived as a relational structure whose elements mutually dynamize and stabilize each other. The project aims at analyzing these domestic environments in order to observe the genesis of the computer from a media-historical deconstructivist perspective, as expressed in the conceptual structure "ComputerWohnen". Methodologically, this is a theory-guided material analysis, primarily of interior design and computer magazines, which are understood as a visual and textual archive in which the cultural negotiations about the home use of the computer in everyday life are documented by presenting the computer in concrete (usage) settings, among other things. The focus is on the analysis of computer magazines. They are of interest with regard to questions of housing, i.e., it is a matter of reconstructing the enclosure of the computer in a housing that makes it an addressable unit available for housing. Moreover, they can be used to redefine the relationship between personal and home computers, and thus the relationship between work and domesticity.
Innovation
Another cultural history of the computer that has been neglected so far.
Interdisciplinary Aspects and Transfer
Interplay of media studies, philosophy, computer history, image studies and newspaper studies
Key Facts
- Keywords:
- Discourse Analysis, design, media, media history, material culture
- Grant Number:
- 441593838
- Project type:
- Research
- Project duration:
- 10/2020 - 03/2025
- Funded by:
- DFG