Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repository.cihe.edu.hk/jspui/handle/cihe/3160
Title: When cyberfeminism meets Chinese philosophy: Computer, weaving, and women
Author(s): Chan, Amy Kit Sze 
Issue Date: 2003
Publisher: Routledge
Journal: Gender, Technology and Development 
Volume: 7
Issue: 3
Start page: 379
End page: 397
Abstract: 
Through a theoretical discussion of cyberfeminism, especially focused on Donna Haraway and Sadie Plant ’s texts, this article traces the interrelationship of women, weaving, computer, and technology from the point of constructing a ’herstory’ of technology. This ’herstory’ is woven together by threads of small stories, such as Ada Lovelace’s biography, Charles Babbage’s creation of Difference Engine, the fables of weaving in mythologies, tales of weaver in poetry, etc. I try to overcome the dualist framework implicit in Sadie Plant’s work by contrasting the vision of cyberfeminism on the representation of the digits with that of ancient Chinese philosophy. Unlike Plant, who sees zero and one—the only digits in the digital form of computer—as representative of the binary system in western civilization, ancient Chinese philosophical texts offer multiple possibilities embodied in the interaction between the ones and the zeros. As this is the first ever attempt of its kind, I have chosen only a couple of texts to begin with—Lao Zi and IChing or Book of Change.
URI: https://repository.cihe.edu.hk/jspui/handle/cihe/3160
DOI: 10.1080/09718524.2003.11910088
CIHE Affiliated Publication: No
Appears in Collections:HL Publication

SFX Query Show full item record

Google ScholarTM

Check

Altmetric

Altmetric


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.