FYSE1067A-S25
Information State Across Ages
The Information State: from the Library of Alexandria to the Snowden Files
With varying degrees of success, officials have long sought to rule rationally by collecting and mobilizing data. What technologies, institutions, and strategies make knowledge into power? What tools do states use to see, know, and read the world? In this course we will examine recent examples like the bureaucracy of modern surveillance or the 1960s chatbot ELIZA alongside such historical phenomena as the Incan knotted-string record-keeping system outlawed by imperial Spain and attempts to build libraries of all human knowledge. Whether or not we are dominated by the ‘information state,’ or live under ‘surveillance capitalism,’ understanding how institutions have used information as a means of control in the past can help us understand very modern controversies: redaction, authentication, metadata, indices, and searchability all have deep histories.
With varying degrees of success, officials have long sought to rule rationally by collecting and mobilizing data. What technologies, institutions, and strategies make knowledge into power? What tools do states use to see, know, and read the world? In this course we will examine recent examples like the bureaucracy of modern surveillance or the 1960s chatbot ELIZA alongside such historical phenomena as the Incan knotted-string record-keeping system outlawed by imperial Spain and attempts to build libraries of all human knowledge. Whether or not we are dominated by the ‘information state,’ or live under ‘surveillance capitalism,’ understanding how institutions have used information as a means of control in the past can help us understand very modern controversies: redaction, authentication, metadata, indices, and searchability all have deep histories.
- Term:
- Spring 2025
- Location:
- 75 Shannon Street 206(75SHS 206)
- Schedule:
- 12:45pm-2:00pm on Tuesday, Thursday at 75SHS 206 (Feb 10, 2025 to May 12, 2025)
1:10pm-2:00pm on Friday at (Feb 10, 2025 to May 12, 2025) - Type:
- Seminar
- Course Modality:
- In-Person
- Instructors:
- Ron Makleff
- Subject:
- First Year Seminar
- Department:
- First-Year Seminar Program
- Division:
- Interdisciplinary
- Requirements Fulfilled:
- CMP CW HIS
- Levels:
- Undergraduate
- Availability:
- View availability, prerequisites, and other requirements.
- Course Reference Number (CRN):
- 22786
- Subject Code:
- FYSE
- Course Number:
- 1067
- Section Identifier:
- A