Making Computers Accessible: Disability Rights and Digital Technology

Making Computers Accessible: Disability Rights and Digital Technology

by Elizabeth R. Petrick
Making Computers Accessible: Disability Rights and Digital Technology

Making Computers Accessible: Disability Rights and Digital Technology

by Elizabeth R. Petrick

eBook

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Overview

The revolution in accessible computer technology was fueled by disability activism, the interactive nature of personal computers, and changing public policy.

In 1974, not long after developing the first universal optical character recognition technology, Raymond Kurzweil struck up a conversation with a blind man on a flight. Kurzweil explained that he was searching for a use for his new software. The blind man expressed interest: One of the frustrating obstacles that blind people grappled with, he said, was that no computer program could translate text into speech. Inspired by this chance meeting, Kurzweil decided that he must put his new innovation to work to “overcome this principal handicap of blindness.” By 1976, he had built a working prototype, which he dubbed the Kurzweil Reading Machine.

This type of innovation demonstrated the possibilities of computers to dramatically improve the lives of people living with disabilities. In Making Computers Accessible, Elizabeth R. Petrick tells the compelling story of how computer engineers and corporations gradually became aware of the need to make computers accessible for all people. Motivated by user feedback and prompted by legislation such as the Americans with Disabilities Act, which offered the promise of equal rights via technological accommodation, companies developed sophisticated computerized devices and software to bridge the accessibility gap.

People with disabilities, Petrick argues, are paradigmatic computer users, demonstrating the personal computer’s potential to augment human abilities and provide for new forms of social, professional, and political participation. Bridging the history of technology, science and technology studies, and disability studies, this book traces the psychological, cultural, and economic evolution of a consumer culture aimed at individuals with disabilities, who increasingly rely on personal computers to make their lives richer and more interconnected.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781421416472
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Publication date: 06/01/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 208
File size: 1 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Elizabeth R. Petrick is an assistant professor of history at the New Jersey Institute of Technology.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Disability Rights and Technology before the Personal Computer
2. Early Personal Computer Accessibility, 1980–1987
3. Corporate Philanthropy and the National Special Education Alliance
4. The Growth of Disability Rights and Accessible Computer Technologies
5. Accessibility and Software Applications in the 1990s
Conclusion
Notes
A Note on Theory, Method, and Sources
Index

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

A deeply researched, extremely well written, and cutting-edge book. Elizabeth Petrick wisely focuses not on hardware and software but on potential and actual users; on the evolution of a consumer culture of persons with various disabilities eager for personal computers to change their lives; on major corporate players like Apple, IBM, and Microsoft; and on shifting societal values and legislation that moved from treating persons with disabilities as separate from the American mainstream to treating them as part of that mainstream. Indeed, in this first-rate history of technology, she effectively integrates developments in both hardware and software with cultural, social, economic, and psychological developments.
—Howard P. Segal, University of Maine, author of Utopias: A Brief History from Ancient Writings to Virtual Communities

Howard P. Segal

A deeply researched, extremely well written, and cutting-edge book. Elizabeth Petrick wisely focuses not on hardware and software but on potential and actual users; on the evolution of a consumer culture of persons with various disabilities eager for personal computers to change their lives; on major corporate players like Apple, IBM, and Microsoft; and on shifting societal values and legislation that moved from treating persons with disabilities as separate from the American mainstream to treating them as part of that mainstream. Indeed, in this first-rate history of technology, she effectively integrates developments in both hardware and software with cultural, social, economic, and psychological developments.

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