ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Gendering the digital body: women and computers
Archana Barua · Ananya Barua
Received: 23 August 2011 / Accepted: 5 January 2012 / Published online: 2 March 2012
© Springer-Verlag London Limited 2012
Abstract As we live in a culture where “everything can
be commodified, measured and calculated and can be put in
the competitive market for sale, detached from its roots and
purpose,” there is need to redefine our humanness in terms
of the changing nature of science, technology, and their
deeper impact on human life. More than anything else, it is
Information Technology that now has tremendous influ-
ence on all spheres of our life, and in a sense, IT has
become the destiny of our life. And this is where the real
trauma lies. On the one hand, our being in the cyberspace
opens up new and exciting horizons before us; on the other
hand, we ourselves are changed and transformed in the
process. The virtual world transforms human users to a
problem-solver technocrat. The speed at which Information
Technology is changing the way that youth around the
world are socializing, playing, and researching, it is the
common practice now for a 15-year old to go home and
update their MySpace page, followed by playing online
games, or looking up the new trendy YouTube video.
These forms of technology are often the topic of adolescent
conversations as YouTube, blogs, e-magazines, Face book,
MySpace, iPhones, and iPods dominate the commercial
and social networking market. Some researchers refer to
this phenomenon as ubiquitous technology drawing atten-
tion to the fact that ubiquitous technology acknowledges
the speedy adoption of day-to-day use of technology as a
global phenomenon. In this background, this article aims at
revisiting the question, “What is to be human in the era of
Ubiquitous Technology?” From a feminist perspective, one
can still redefine the boundaries between femininity and
masculinity in the context of IT and its impact on our
lifestyle and thought style. While examining the ways in
which our definitions of “woman” and “man” are shifting
in this new communication environment, Elizabeth Lane
Lawley observes that we cannot fix a single center from
which the experiences of women with computer and
communication systems can be viewed and that such fixity
would only serve to deepen inequities rather than exposing
and removing them. She finally submits, “It is possible to
use new theoretical perspectives on the shifting boundaries
of gender definitions to rethink a previously deterministic
view of the effect of new technologies on society, and
particularly the effect of those technologies on women.
While the gradual absence of the subject from the field of
Artificial Intelligence leads to the invisibility of feminine
care along with social and relational nature of man, some
feminists dismiss the biological sex distinction on such
issues and encourage females to ‘imitate man’ and to
become more aggressive, assertive and dominating”
(Lawley 1993). What are the possible impacts of this new
technology on the so-called feminine traits of our human
nature? How far our definitions of “woman” and “man” are
shifting in this new communication environment? This is
what this article seeks to explore.
Keywords ICT · Computer · Digital body · Cyborg ·
Gender · Feminism · Culture-Western · Eastern ·
Indian · Globalization
Archana Barua (&)
Department of Humanities and Social Sciences,
IIT Guwahati, Guwahati 781039, India
e-mail: archana@iitg.ernet.in
Ananya Barua
Department of Philosophy, Hindu College, University of Delhi,
University Enclave, Delhi 110007, India
e-mail: barua.ananya@gmail.com
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AI & Soc (2012) 27:465–477
DOI 10.1007/s00146-012-0371-9