Famous Women in Computing, ABI Advisory Board

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Today, the Anita Borg Institute Board of Advisors met, hosted by Cisco in San Jose, California. What an inspiring and accomplished group of technical leaders! It is an honor and pleasure to serve with them.

In the meeting, Elizabeth Ames (ABI Vice President, Strategic Marketing and Alliances) passed out copies of a card listing Famous Women in Computing from the 1840s -2000s. The card honors Ada Lovelace, Henrietta Swan Leavitt, Grete Hermann, The ENIAC Programmers, Katherine Johnson, Grace Hopper, Erna Schneider Hoover, Lynn Conway, Irene Grief, Radia Perlman, Adele Goldberg, Anita Borg, Frances Allen, and Deborah Estrin.  The information for the card came from the CRA-W and Anita Borg Institute Wikipedia Project – Writing Wikipedia Pages for Notable Women in Computing – a project I have been working on with a great team since 2009. Such a pleasure to see our work in print! The cards will be distributed at tomorrow’s Women of Vision awards.

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Photo copyright by Katy Dickinson 2014. “Famous Women in Computing” document copyright by the Anita Borg Institute 2014 – used with permission.

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Equality in Faith for Women

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In many ways, this is a good time to be a woman of faith. Current examples have come to my attention:

Since I am an Episcopalian Christian, it is no surprise that I know about the first events. You too can follow church gender politics on such websites as Chicks in Pointy Hats.  I learned of the “Women and Mitzvot” ruling when it was announced by Rabbi David Booth at Congregation Kol Emeth (Palo Alto, California) last weekend. I was at Kol Emeth for the Bat Mitzvah of my friend Beth. Beth sang and discussed her Torah portion beautifully – I am very proud of her (and of her brother Max who also read).

“Women and Mitzvot” includes the following remarkable text on p.29:

The role of women in public life has changed dramatically in modernity. In society in general, women are now involved in commerce and the professions on an equal basis with men, and secular law considers women legally free and independent. In Jewish communities, women have been seeking to enrich their lives with more mitzvot. The changes in women’s social lives in general and in Jewish communities are not just a matter of external behavior but reflect a changed perception of women. Women are now seen as equal to men in social status, in intellectual ability, and in political and legal rights. The historical circumstances in which women were exempted from certain mitzvot are no longer operative, and we must embrace the realities of life in the 21st century.

And to that we say “Amen”.

Image Copyright 2014 by Katy Dickinson

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Why can’t theology be like science fiction?

University of the South School of Theology EfM Year 4 Books 2014

I admit to reading a great deal of science fiction and fantasy (in addition to literature, history, science, business, technology and other categories of composition), and that science fiction is perhaps not the best starting place for studying Theology, Ethics and Interfaith Encounters – the topics for my fourth year in the Education for Ministry  (“EfM”) program of the University of the SouthSchool of Theology.  Nonetheless, in some ways, science fiction can be more rigorous than theology.

The Webster definition of Theology: “The study of religious faith, practice, and experience. The study of God and God’s relation to the world. A system of religious beliefs or ideas.”  Webster’s definition for Science Fiction is: “Stories about how people and societies are affected by imaginary scientific developments in the future.”

My textbooks for this year are pictured above. EfM is an excellent program. I found all of these books interesting and worth reading (some are inspiring, superb, and worth reading more than once!). Since my EfM group is in Week 30 of a 36 week curriculum, I have finished reading all but the last on this list:

  • Education for Ministry – Reading and Reflection Guide Volume A (2013)
  • Theology for a Troubled Believer: An Introduction to the Christian FaithDiogenes Allen (2010)
  • And God Spoke: the Authority of the Bible for the Church Today, Christopher Bryan (2002)
  • The Christian Moral Life: Practices of Piety, Timothy F. Sedgwick (2008)
  • Living on the Border of the Holy: Renewing the Priesthood of All, L. William Countryman (1999)
  • My Neighbor’s Faith: Stories of Interreligious Encounter, Growth, and Transformation, Edited by Jennifer Howe Peace, Or N. Rose, and Gregory Mobley (2012)

Last week, as I was finishing Living on the Border of the Holy, I identified a source of some of my frustration with my EfM reading this year.  When a fantasy or science fiction author creates a fictional universe, self-consistency is a major concern:

What distinguishes a fictional universe from a simple setting is the level of detail and internal consistency. A fictional universe has an established continuity and internal logic that must be adhered to throughout the work and even across separate works. So, for instance, many books may be set in conflicting fictional versions of Victorian London, but all the stories of Sherlock Holmes are set in the same Victorian London. However, the various film series based on Sherlock Holmes follow their own separate continuities, and so do not take place in the same fictional universe….

A famous example of a fictional universe is Arda, of J. R. R. Tolkien’s books The Lord of the Rings and The Silmarillion. He created first its languages and then the world itself, which he states was “primarily linguistic in inspiration and was begun in order to provide the necessary ‘history’ for the Elvish tongues.” [from Wikipedia’s fictional universe article]

If a popular author does not present logic, continuity, and good writing, the powerful and vocal fan community is pleased to point out every inconsistent detail at length. (Continuity is also a major concern in films – if for no other reason than to avoid being listed on websites devoted to movie mistakes.)  Since reading my first science fiction book many decades ago, I have come to expect logic, continuity, and good editorial practices to be key drivers.  I have not always found those characteristics while reading these theology books.

Example One – from Living on the Border of the Holy

In Living on the Border of the Holy, the geographic metaphor in the title is found throughout the whole book.  “Border” is used 108 times, “borderland” is used 42 times, and “country” (as in “border country” – but not counting hits for the author’s name) is used 65 times.  The image of a border country is explained in many  ways that I found contradictory and confusing:

  • “The encounter with the HIDDEN is a kind of fault line running through the middle of our lives; no one can escape its presence. The HIDDEN forms a border country that turns out to be. paradoxically, our native land.” (p.6)
  • “The border country, therefore, is a place of intense vitality.  It does not draw us away from the everyday world so much as it plunges us deeper into a reality of which the everyday world is the surface.” (p.11)
  • “It can be helpful to imagine our human encounter with the HOLY as life in a border country. It is a country in which, at privileged moments of access, we find ourselves looking over from the everyday world into another, into a world that undergirds the everyday world, limits it, defines it, gives it coherence and meaning, drives it. Yet this hidden world is not another world, but the familiar world discovered afresh.” (p.8)
  • “The border country is the realm in which human existence finds its meaning. The border itself is the indispensable condition for this. If you could slip over entirely into the HIDDEN HOLY, you would no longer be in touch with the basic materials and experiences of human life. If you try to slip over entirely into the everyday world, then actions and experiences merely follow each other in succession without forming a larger whole.” (p.161)

In addition to reading two hundred pages, I spent time prayerfully considering Living on the Border of the Holy, and I discussed it for several hours with my EfM group.  The mixed geographic metaphor and strained logic did not help my understanding:

  • How can a land-feature simultaneously demarcate, undergird, and be a fault line?
  • How can it both be someplace to which we have “privileged moments of access” and also our “native land”?

If this were a science fiction or fantasy book, I think these basic logic and presentation contradictions in the setting would have been sorted out by the editor before publication.  I finally started ignoring the faulty metaphor and got on with considering the excellent content of Living on the Border of the Holy, especially its remarkable analysis of the priestly calling.

Example Two – from Theology for a Troubled Believer

There is no thematic metaphor in Theology for a Troubled Believer but there is certainly a strong cultural point of view. When I read stories about sympathetic, intelligent but non-humanoid characters, I can feel my mind opening to understand how human thinking and capabilities are influenced by our sensory input and body design.  Notable examples of such aliens include:

I admire authors who can understand and present a very different way of thinking and carry it forward through an extended work of fiction. In contrast, when I read Theology for a Troubled Believer, I was frequently irritated (and occasionally infuriated) by the author’s narrow, privileged, academic, and American context for a topic that is far beyond one culture’s circumstances. For example:

  • “The systemic search for reasons, or for the logos for anything and everything, is something we today take for granted.  It is part of our mental makeup.  We do it automatically.” (p.xviii) [While true for many educated Americans, I do not think that the “systemic search for reasons” is part of humanity’s mental makeup.]
  • “…we who live in democracies find it strange to consider the act of the Good Samaritan and the acts of the ‘sheep’ in the parable of the Sheep and Goats as acts of justice.  To those who think in terms of democratic societies, it is an act of mercy, not justice.” (p.23) [People living outside of democracies may also share this thinking.]
  • “The natural world is also a witness to God’s power, wisdom, and goodness…. Nature is not used to move from unbelief to belief.  Nature was always used by people who had already been moved by God’s grace to a life of faith as a way to gain a better idea of God’s power, wisdom, and goodness from nature’s immense size, intricate order, and usefulness to human life.” (p.50) [This sweeping generalization is not even true for the many Americans whom Nature has lead to belief!]

In addition to his insensitivity to other cultures, the author’s arrogance toward believers in Judaism and Islam is breathtaking. However, Diogenes Allen is most snarky about fellow scholars, particularly “philosophers of religion”. His negativity is tiring as a continuing theme.  The best part of this book is Diogenes Allen’s inspiring analysis of the parable of the Good Samaritan and the absolute value of human beings – that alone makes Theology for a Troubled Believer worth the slog.  However, I think if this book was in the science fiction or fantasy genre, a sensible editor would have gone to work with her red pen to make some much-needed improvements in its point of view and writing mechanics.

Example Three – from And God Spoke

I include And God Spoke because it was easily the best book of theology I read this year. And God Spoke is accessible, funny, and succinct. It includes lovely quotes by famous writers (C.S. Lewis: “Now the trouble about trying to make yourself stupider than you really are is that you very often succeed.”) and excellent writing in general:

“We need to beware a naïve belief that thinks it can take a couple of verses of scripture in isolation from their wider context and find there universal moral rules that are to be applied remorselessly in all cases, however complex. We need equally to beware of a naïve skepticism that can see in scripture only a mass of contradictions and inconsistencies from which it is possible to prove anything and nothing.” (p.10)

All in all, this is a book that makes the study of Christian faith, practice, and experience a pleasure.   Interestingly, there is a section in And God Spoke that analyzes how words are used, based on the modes of language presented by literary critic Northrop Frye. Christopher Bryan writes about visionary or imaginative language as:

“…words used to take us beyond our reason or our loyalties to worlds where our ordinary modes of consciousness are only one possibility among many, where imagination, fantasy, dreams, and intuition have play…. Words used in this last mode can carry us in imagination to other worlds — to the worlds of the gods, of myth, of universes transcending the universe we know. And here we find stories of our relationship to those worlds — stories of creation, fall, and redemption. Here we find those grand, overarching narratives that shape our understanding of the universe around us, and our place in it.” (pp.35-36)

The author goes on to write that visionary language is the most significant and normative for much of the Bible. Imaginative language is thus a shared mode of expression for both the Bible and for science fiction / fantasy. And God Spoke meets the best standards of science fiction and is a good example to all future books of theology.

Science Fiction and Fantasy Books
Science Fiction and Fantasy Books

University of the South, School of Theology EfM, Diploma Katy Dickinson 2014
My EfM Diploma! (arrived early)

Images Copyright 2014 by Katy Dickinson

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Katy on People to People Radio: 1 May 2014

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Tonight (1 May 2014), I will be on People To People Global Radio Show talking with US Doctors for Africa Founder and Chairman, Ted Alemayhu, about Triangular Partnership, and the Pan-Africa Medical Doctors and Healthcare Conference, to be held 21-23 May 2014 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Our segment of this weekly radio program will be hosted by Dr. Anteneh Habte, Chairman of People to People.  Join us Thursdays at 9:00 pm Eastern Time (6 pm Pacific Time).  Access the weekly show online http://www.blogtalkradio.com/p2pglobalradioshow/ or phone 646-595-4742 each Thursday evening.

I will be traveling to Africa later this month (3rd time this year – a personal best!), with my husband John Plocher (his first trip to Africa).  I have been working on the Triangular Partnership panel (moderated by former US Ambassador to Ethiopia David Shinn), as well as with the very helpful staff of US Ambassador Patricia M. Haslach of the US Embassy in Addis to prepare for the conference.

I edited and contributed a chapter to the People to People book Triangular Partnership: the Power of the Diaspora (published in September 2013) so this is a topic of great interest for me. There has been much written and discussed about Twinning. I believe that adding the diaspora – people who have a past and a future in both developing countries and western institutions – is a stronger model for successful development.

1 May 2014 Archived Recording

People to People Triangular Partnership Logo

19 October 2019: Links Updated.

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Recruiting TechWomen Mentors

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Last night, many of the TechWomen 2011-2013 mentor alumnae from the Silicon Valley and San Francisco participated in an event introducing the U.S. State Department mentoring program for women in the Middle East and Africa to potential new mentors. Thanks to BrightRoll for hosting the event!

What is TechWomen?

TechWomen empowers, connects, and supports the next generation of women leaders in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) from Africa and the Middle East by providing them the access and opportunity needed to advance their careers, pursue their dreams, and inspire women and girls in their communities.

Through mentorship and exchange, TechWomen strengthens participants’ professional capacity, increases mutual understanding between key networks of professionals, and expands girls’ interest in STEM careers by exposing them to female role models.

1,400 women in STEM from 16 countries have already applied to be one of the 78 emerging leaders who will come to the San Francisco Bay Area in October 2014. Selections will be announced in June. Also in June, applications will open for professional mentors. Cultural mentor applications open in July. This is a life-changing and excellent program – both for mentors and mentees. I have been part of TechWomen since 2010 and I recommend it highly!

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Images Copyright 2014 by Katy Dickinson

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Transfer to San Jose State

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My son Paul has recently attended both “Admitted Spartan’s Day” and admitted students’ orientation day at San Jose State University (in San Jose, California where we live). He is in his final quarter at Foothill College and is excited about graduating in June with an Associates degree in Studio Art. After transferring SJSU in September 2014, Paul will continue to study fine art and also plans to earn a teaching credential.

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Images Copyright 2014 by Katy Dickinson

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Happy 450th Birthday, Shakespeare!

Shakespeare Bust 2014 by Katy Dickinson

Today is the traditional celebration of the birth and death of William Shakespeare – in fact, this is the Bard’s 450th Birthday! I am dedicating this, my 1,500th blog entry since I first wrote posted on 2 June 2005, to my favorite author: William Shakespeare.

I encourage you to spend today with the Bard:

Today is also the birthday of America’s Folger Shakespeare Library, that opened in Washington DC on April 23, 1932 and is home to the world’s largest and finest collection of Shakespeare materials.  Whether you loathe or adore Shakespeare, today is his big day!

On 3 May 2014, the St. Andrew’s Shakespeare Reading Group celebrated The Bard’s 450th birthday with a cake:
William Shakespeare 450th Birthday Cake

King Lear card by Katy Dickinson 2014
Antique German collectable card showing Shakespeare’s King Lear and his court

Images Copyright 2014 by Katy Dickinson

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