A History of Women in British Telecommunications: Introducing a Special Issue
by Elizabeth Bruton, Mar Hicks
p. 1-9
Abstract
Women's roles in telecommunications history remain underexplored despite a recent proliferation of work on women in the history of technology. This special issue seeks to correct that imbalance by situating women's work in early telecommunications in the UK in relation to broader changes in British society.
Elizabeth Bruton is curator of technology and engineering at the Science Museum in London. Her research interests include the history of communications, gender and women in electrical engineering, museum collections, and scientific instruments.
Mar Hicks is associate professor of history of technology at Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago. Their work focuses on the history of computing, gender, labor, and sexuality. Hicks's first book, Programmed Inequality (MIT Press, 2017), shows how sexism negatively affected British computing.
Embodying Telegraphy in Late Victorian London
by Katie Hindmarch-Watson
p. 10-29
Abstract
Upon the nationalization of the British telegraph system in 1870, a set of processes at work inside London's Central Telegraph Office that was dictated by the bodily and spatial ordering of the era and combined with competing modes of Victorian class-inflected respectability produced gender-specified information labor. One of the effects of this process on telegraphy in London's Central Office in the first decade of nationalized telegraphy was the creation of high-status circuits catering to the state, international trade, sporting life, and imperial business and low-status circuits directed toward the local and the provincial. These distinct telegraphic orbits were connected to different types of telegraph instruments operated by differently gendered telegraphists. The human components of the telegraph system embodied the stratifications of the ascendant telecommunications era.
Katie Hindmarch-Watson is assistant professor of modern British history at Johns Hopkins University. Her forthcoming book, Dispatches from the Underground: Telecommunications Workers and the Making of an Information Capital, 1870–1916 (University of California Press), explores both the work experiences and symbolic import of London's telegraphists, telegraph boys, and telephone operators in the first decades of nationalized British telecommunications.
"Maiden, Whom We Never See": Cultural Representations of the "Lady Telephonist" in Britain ca. 1880–1930 and Institutional Responses
by Helen Glew
p. 30-50
Abstract
This article examines attitudes toward the female telephone operator in the British press and a range of literary and cultural sources. Perceptions of female telephonists were rooted in both reactions to the increasingly visible employment of women in white-collar work and uncertain responses to the telephone as a new communication medium. Such perceptions of the female telephonist became stereotyped and static, though there were some later challenges and attempts to nuance these perceptions as well. The General Post Office took over the service and implemented a number of changes, but ultimately the organization and telephonists themselves had to coexist with these stereotypes.
Helen Glew is senior lecturer in history at the University of Westminster. Her research focuses on women's employment in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in Britain, and she is the author of Gender, Rhetoric and Regulation: Women's Work in the Civil Service and the London County Council, 1900–55 (Manchester University Press, 2016).
"Uncertain at Present for Women, but May Increase": Opportunities for Women in Wireless Telegraphy during the First World War
by Elizabeth Bruton
p. 51-74
Abstract
The British General Post Office (GPO) was one of the leading employers of women in Britain between the late nineteenth and mid-twentieth centuries, first as telegraph operators and later in telephone exchanges. However, there were ongoing private discussions within the GPO as to the physical capabilities of women, as well as suitable working facilities and traditionally gendered spaces and occupations. These discussions shaped wireless telegraphy as a highly gendered and exclusively masculine profession until the exigencies of the First World War led to limited opportunities for women as domestic wireless operators for the Women's Royal Naval Service (WRNS) from 1917 onward.
Elizabeth Bruton is curator of technology and engineering at the Science Museum in London. Her research interests include the history of communications, gender and women in electrical engineering, museum collections, and scientific instruments.
The Key Role Played by WAAC British Post Office Female Staff in Army Signal Units on the Western Front, 1917–1920
by Barbara Walsh
p. 75-97
Abstract
There is a gaping void in the historiography of the Women's Auxiliary Army Corps (WAAC), later called the Queen Mary's Army Auxiliary Corps QMAAC), brought about by the absence of an informed understanding of the crucial role played by the young women seconded from British post office exchanges to serve as telephonists and telegraphists in France in 1917. Specifically attached to Royal Engineers' signal units in British Expeditionary Force army bases and all three echelons of its General Headquarters, their arrival ensured the continued smooth operation of the army's vital lines of communication. This article examines how their key role as professional technologists within a tightly secured military sector made a significant contribution to the final successful outcome of the conflict. Questions can be raised why their skills were never later addressed within the historiography, and it may be concluded that adequate recognition is long overdue.
Barbara Walsh holds a PhD in history from Lancaster University UK and is an independent scholar who has produced several groundbreaking works on a variety of topics that have opened new fields of research for overseas scholars. She is published by the Irish Academic Press, the History Press, and Pen and Sword and in translation by Les Éditions des l'Officine.
Behind the Screen: Content Moderation in the Shadows of Social Media by Sarah T. Roberts (review)
p. 98-100
New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2019. 280 pp. $30.00
ISBN: 978-0-3002-3588-3
Natalia Kovalyova
Excerpt
Launched to further correct "a collective myopia" (61) regarding technology, Sarah T. Roberts's study inquires into the practices of what she calls "commercial content moderation" (CCM). Her exploration adopts a very strict definition of CCM as "a job, a function, and an industrial practice that exists only in this context and could only ever exist in it" (15). By separating online content moderation from the practices of censorship, the author insulates her study from the political powerlines that it inevitably crosses and proceeds to find out who does content screening for tech companies, what their labor looks and feels like, and what it entails.
Surrogate Humanity: Race, Robots and the Politics of Technological Futures by Neda Atanasoski and Kalindi Vora (review)
p. 100-102
Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2019. 256 pp. $24.95 (Paperback)
ISBN: 978-1-4780-0386-1
Andrea Flores
Excerpt
Neda Atanasoski and Kalindi Vora's Surrogate Humanity: Race, Robots and the Politics of Technological Futures is a wide-ranging and ambitious analysis of the relationships between labor practices, artificial intelligence, and other technologies in modern society. Written from a feminist technoscience viewpoint, the book weaves its way throughout time periods and industries, detailing the ways in which new technologies have disrupted traditional labor practices and how humans have adapted to these changes. The book examines robotization on an international scale, from General Motors' Cold War–era Unimate, a four-thousand-pound arm attached to a steel base used to pour liquid metal into die casts (41), to Spaniard Sergei Santos's sex robot (sexbot), Silicon Samantha, the 2017 robot "designed for emotional closeness" (190). From the second page of the introduction, Surrogate makes its intentions clear—this is a frank discussion about the intersection of race and technology.