From sturkle at MIT.EDU Tue Dec 16 11:29:08 2003 From: sturkle at MIT.EDU (Sherry Turkle) Date: Tue, 16 Dec 2003 11:29:08 -0500 Subject: [Itself] Evocative Object Essays Message-ID: December 16, 2003 Dear Colleagues, Some of you have written essays for Evocative Objects: Things We Think With. We have essays about gears and essays about ballet slippers. We have essays about string and essays about Chinese scholars' rocks. We have essays about rolling pins and essays about the physics of Saran Wrap. I am grateful to you for your submissions, and to those of you who are still working, I am looking forward to receiving your essays as soon as possible. I write because many of you who have been associated with our Evocative Objects Seminar series have expressed an interest in contributing an essay to this collection. The holidays and the semester break may provide the time and the opportunity to involve new people in this endeavor. If you have not been part of this project but would like to participate, I invite you to submit a contribution by February 15. I would like the final volume to represent the widest range of voices, disciplines, and interests as possible. We live in a time when technology is at the center of our lives. This volume will offer reflections on how artifacts carry emotions as well as ideas, on the deep connections between technology and human development. We are asking for a short (5-20 page) original essay about a specific object that has been particularly meaningful in your life. It can, but does not have to be, a technological object. It can be an object from your childhood, a favorite toy or a first ink pen, or one from later in life. The style is yours to decide, but we envisage one that is personal, serious but accessible. The goal is to bring our work to a broad interdisciplinary audience. Our theme is things and thinking, as well as the integration of thought and feeling. Thus, we ask you to choose an object that has provoked you to reflect about mind, body, science, mathematics, history, language, feelings, about such categories as the natural and the artificial, or about how things "work" in some way that seemed important to you - perhaps in childhood, perhaps later. You may choose an object that intrigued or moved you, or an object you feared. It can be an object that brought a philosophical problem "down to earth," an object that inspired you to choose your intellectual and/or personal life questions. Please send all contributions to Olivia Dast?, Project Director for the evocative objects volume: . In closing, I want to announce that we will be continuing our evocative objects work in the spring semester in a format that will enable us to have a more extended conversation than was possible over lunch. There will be a day-long Evocative Objects workshop in E51-095 on Friday, March 5, 2004. Please save the date and consult our web page for program details: http://web.mit.edu/~sturkle/techself/. Best wishes for the holiday season, Sherry Turkle Abby Rockefeller Mauz? Professor of the Social Studies of Science and Technology Program in Science, Technology, and Society Director, MIT Initiative on Technology and Self -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mailman.mit.edu/pipermail/itself/attachments/20031216/84feb9cc/attachment.htm