Code/Space: Software and Everyday Life
- Length: 304 pages
- Edition: 1
- Language: English
- Publisher: The MIT Press
- Publication Date: 2011-04-22
- ISBN-10: 0262042487
- ISBN-13: 9780262042482
- Sales Rank: #3021835 (See Top 100 Books)
After little more than half a century since its initial development, computer code is extensively and intimately woven into the fabric of our everyday lives. From the digital alarm clock that wakes us to the air traffic control system that guides our plane in for a landing, software is shaping our world: it creates new ways of undertaking tasks, speeds up and automates existing practices, transforms social and economic relations, and offers new forms of cultural activity, personal empowerment, and modes of play. In Code/Space, Rob Kitchin and Martin Dodge examine software from a spatial perspective, analyzing the dyadic relationship of software and space. The production of space, they argue, is increasingly dependent on code, and code is written to produce space. Examples of code/space include airport check-in areas, networked offices, and cafés that are transformed into workspaces by laptops and wireless access. Kitchin and Dodge argue that software, through its ability to do work in the world, transduces space. Then Kitchin and Dodge develop a set of conceptual tools for identifying and understanding the interrelationship of software, space, and everyday life, and illustrate their arguments with rich empirical material. And, finally, they issue a manifesto, calling for critical scholarship into the production and workings of code rather than simply the technologies it enables — a new kind of social science focused on explaining the social, economic, and spatial contours of software.
Table of Contents
Part I Introduction
Chapter 1 Introducing Code/Space
Chapter 2 The Nature of Software
Part II The Difference Software Makes
Chapter 3 Remaking Everyday Objects
Chapter 4 The Transduction of Space
Chapter 5 Automated Management
Chapter 6 Software, Creativity, and Empowerment
Part III The Transduction of Everyday Spatialities
Chapter 7 Air Travel
Chapter 8 Home
Chapter 9 Consumption
Part IV Future Code/Space
Chapter 10 Everyware
Chapter 11 A Manifesto for Software Studies