Life by Algorithms
How Roboprocesses Are Remaking Our World
Hugh Gusterson editor Catherine Besteman editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:The University of Chicago Press
Published:5th Jun '19
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Computerized processes are everywhere in our society. They are the automated phone messaging systems that businesses use to screen calls; the link between student standardized test scores and public schools' access to resources; the algorithms that regulate patient diagnoses and reimbursements to doctors. The storage, sorting, and analysis of massive amounts of information have enabled the automation of decision-making at an unprecedented level. Meanwhile, computers have offered a model of cognition that increasingly shapes our approach to the world. The proliferation of "roboprocesses" is the result, as editors Catherine Besteman and Hugh Gusterson observe in this rich and wide-ranging volume, which features contributions from a distinguished cast of scholars in anthropology, communications, international studies, and political science. Although automatic processes are designed to be engines of rational systems, the stories in Life by Algorithms reveal how they can in fact produce absurd, inflexible, or even dangerous outcomes. Joining the call for "algorithmic transparency," the contributors bring exceptional sensitivity to everyday sociality into their critique to better understand how the perils of modern technology affect finance, medicine, education, housing, the workplace, food production, public space, and emotions--not as separate problems but as linked manifestations of a deeper defect in the fundamental ordering of our society.
"A fine array of instructive studies that amount to a beneficent algorithm for understanding our times."--Marshall Sahlins, emeritus, University of Chicago "'The Machine Stops, ' E. M. Forster's 1909 science fiction story, tells the tale of a human society collapsing when the technology upon which it has become dependent fails. Think of Gusterson and Besteman's volume as 'The Machine Starts, ' a collection of unsettling ethnographic accounts of the rise of algorithmic governance, of a world in which machines automate structures of social inequality in the service of distracted corporate profit, overreaching militarism, and a globally attenuating commitment to democracy. A necessary and sobering call to arms."--Stefan Helmreich, Massachusetts Institute of Technology "Life by Algorithms brings together a number of excellent scholars who study the growing impact of computerized algorithms on our lives. For anyone interested in computerized algorithms, this volume is a welcome and timely contribution to an important emerging field."--Eitan Y. Wilf, author of Creativity on Demand "What can anthropology offer to contemporary debates about algorithms? Tackling the term in its broadest sense, this wide-ranging collection provides one answer: from finance to farming, from classrooms to courthouses, algorithms dehumanize, damage, and deskill the practices of everyday life. Life by Algorithms documents the calculative violence of bureaucratic rationality in its most recent computational form. For anthropological scholars of algorithmic systems, this book is sure to become an obligatory reference."--Nick Seaver, Tufts University "Compelling and original, this book examines several key issues that have previously failed to receive the serious intellectual rigor that they deserve. By focusing on many diverse domains of algorithmic implementation--from education to prisons, from the border to factory farming--Life by Algorithms gives readers an excellent and accessible overview of how the 'algorithmic turn' challenges many of our current understandings of the world."--John Cheney-Lippold, University of Michigan
ISBN: 9780226627427
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
224 pages