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 -