
Activists, Pundits, Politicians, And The Press Frequently Proclaim Today's Digitally Mediated Racial Justice Activism The New Civil Rights Movement. As Charlton D. Mcilwain Shows In This Book, The Story Of Racial Justice Movement Organizing Online Is Much Longer And Varied Than Most People Know. In Fact, It Spans Nearly Five Decades And Involves A Varied Group Of Engineers, Entrepreneurs, Hobbyists, Journalists, And Activists. But This Is A History That Is Virtually Unknown Even In Our Current Age Of Google, Facebook, Twitter, And Black Lives Matter. Beginning With The Simultaneous Rise Of Civil Rights And Computer Revolutions In The 1960s, Mcilwain, For The First Time, Chronicles The Long Relationship Between African Americans, Computing Technology, And The Internet. In Turn, He Argues That The Forgotten Figures Who Worked To Make Black Politics Central To The Internet's Birth And Evolution Paved The Way For Today's Explosion Of Racial Justice Activism. From The 1960s To Present, The Book Examines How Computing Technology Has Been Used To Neutralize The Threat That Black People Pose To The Existing Racial Order, But Also How Black People Seized These New Computing Tools To Build Community, Wealth, And Wage A War For Racial Justice.through Archival Sources And The Voices Of Many Of Those Who Lived And Made This History, Black Software Centralizes African Americans' Role In The Internet's Creation And Evolution, Illuminating Both The Limits And Possibilities For Using Digital Technology To Push For Racial Justice In The United States And Across The Globe.
This book investigates the historical intersection of African American political activism and the development of computing technology over the past five decades. Charlton D. McIlwain, a professor of media, culture, and communication, utilizes extensive archival research and personal interviews to challenge the narrative that digital racial justice activism is a recent phenomenon. He argues that Black engineers, entrepreneurs, and activists were foundational to the internet's evolution, using these tools both to challenge racial hierarchies and to build independent community infrastructure.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and critics recognize this work as a significant contribution to the history of technology, specifically for its focus on marginalized contributions to digital infrastructure. Readers frequently note the depth of the archival research and the clarity with which the author connects historical technological developments to contemporary social movements.
Page Count:
272
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190863854
ISBN-13:
9780190863852
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