TY  - GEN
ID  - discovery10045213
N2  - Prior work examining technology usage and maintenance practices
in homes describes division of labor in terms of technical expertise.
In this paper, we offer a counter-narrative to this explanation for
engagement with Ubiquitous Computing. Using feminist theory as
an analytic lens, we examine how gender identity work is a
determining factor of whether and how people engage with digital
technologies in their homes. We present a model of gender &
technical identity co-construction.
PB  - ACM Press
UR  - http://doi.org/10.1145/3196839.3196845
CY  - New York, NY, USA
KW  - Gender
KW  -  Privacy
KW  -  Security
KW  -  Networking
KW  -  HumanComputer
Interaction
KW  -  Ubiquitous Computing
KW  -  Sex
KW  - 
Technical Ability
KW  -  Self-Efficacy
KW  -  Agency. Idenity
A1  - Rode, JA
A1  - Shenan Poole, E
T3  - Gender. Knowledge. Informatics. Network for Research Transfer of Interdisciplinary Knowledge regarding Gender and IT (GEWINN)
TI  - Putting the gender back in digital housekeeping
EP  - 90
Y1  - 2018/05/14/
AV  - public
SP  - 79
N1  - This version is the author accepted manuscript. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher?s terms and conditions.
ER  -