Trading Stories: an Oral History Conversation between Geoffrey Rockwell and Julianne Nyhan

Item

Has Interviewer
Julianne Nyhan
Has Interviewee
Geoffrey Rockwell
Date
28th April 2012
Location
Skype interview
Language
English
fileFormat
MP3
Recording Storage Medium
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Title
Trading Stories: an Oral History Conversation between Geoffrey Rockwell and Julianne Nyhan
Interview Summary
This extended interview with Geoffrey Rockwell was carried out via Skype on the 28th April 2012. He narrates that he had been aware of computing developments when growing up in Italy but it was in college in the late 1970s that he took formal training in computing. He bought his first computer, an Apple II clone, after graduation when he was working as a teacher in the Middle East. Throughout the interview he reflects on the various computers he has used and how the mouse that he used with an early Macintosh instinctively appealed to him. By the mid-1980s he was attending graduate school in the University of Toronto and was accepted on to the Apple Research Partnership Programme, which enabled him to be embedded in the central University of Toronto Computing Services; he went on to hold a full time position there. Also taking a PhD in Philosophy, he spent many lunch times talking with John Bradley. This resulted in the building of text analysis tools and their application to Hume's Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, as well as some of the earliest, if not the earliest, conference paper on visualisation in the digital humanities community. He reflects on the wide range of influences that shaped and inspired his early work in the field, for example, the Research Computing Group at the University of Toronto and their work in visual programming environments. In 1994 he applied, and was hired at McMaster University to what he believes was the first job openly advertised as a humanities computing position in Canada. After exploring the opposition to computing that he encountered he reflects that the image of the underdog has perhaps become a foundational myth of digital humanities and questions whether it is still a useful one.
Subject
An oral history interview for the Hidden Histories project
Processed Derivative Material
Full text: inDigital Humanities Quarterly
Rights
Interview audio files are made available under a creative commons licence “by-nc-nd” with the following characteristics:• by: the content must be attributed to me and the interviewer.• non-commercial: commercial use of the content is not allowed.• no derivative works: the material is to be allocated in its original form and may not beedited.See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-ncnd/3.0/ and http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/legalcode.
Related Resource
Julianne Nyhan. Hidden Histories: Computing and the Humanities. DHQ.
Bibliographic Citation
Julianne Nyhan and Geoffrey Rockwell, “Trading Stories: an Oral History Conversation between Geoffrey Rockwell and Julianne Nyhan,”Hidden Histories: Digital Humanities 1949 - Present, accessed October 21, 2024,https://hiddenhistories.omeka.net/items/show/52.
Creator
Julianne Nyhan and Geoffrey Rockwell
Type
oral history
identifier
N/A