InfoCoBuild

History C192: History of Information

History C192: History of Information (Spring 2013, UC Berkeley). Instructors: Professor Geoffrey Nunberg and Professor Paul Duguid. This course explores the history of information and associated technologies, uncovering why we think of ours as "the information age." We will select moments in the evolution of production, recording, and storage from the earliest writing systems to the world of Short Message Service (SMS) and blogs. In every instance, we'll be concerned with both what and when and how and why, and we will keep returning to the question of technological determinism: how do technological developments affect society and vice versa? The course is also listed as Cognitive Science C103.

Introduction


Lecture 01 - Introduction
Lecture 02 - The Age of Information
Lecture 03 - Technological Determinism
Lecture 04 - The First Information Technology: Writing Systems
Lecture 05 - What Follows from Writing?
Lecture 06 - Manuscript "Culture"
Lecture 07 - The Print "Revolution"
Lecture 08 - The Scientific "Revolution"
Lecture 09 - The Emergence of the Public
Lecture 10 - The Organization of Knowledge
Lecture 11 - Language and the Dictionary
Lecture 12 - Unnoticed Revolutions?: Time-keeping, Book-keeping and Control?
Lecture 13 - Communications "Revolution": Telephone and Telegraph
Lecture 15 - The Rise of Literacy
Lecture 16 - The Impact of Photography
Lecture 17 - Information, Propaganda, and Objectivity
Lecture 21 - Information as Property
Lecture 22 - The Rise of Broadcasting
Lecture 23 - Computer "Revolution"
Lecture 24 - Information Visualization
Lecture 25 - Storage and Search
Lecture 26 - Advent of the Internet
Lecture 27 - Social Implications of the Internet I: Mysteries of the Region
Lecture 29 - The Internet: Social Effects
Lecture 30 - Disintermediation, Dematerialization, Disaggregation, Disruption