ESP Biography



SHREEHARSH KELKAR, Graduate student in Science Technology and Society




Major: Science, Technology and Society

College/Employer: MIT

Year of Graduation: G

Picture of Shreeharsh Kelkar

Brief Biographical Sketch:

I am interested in understanding the role of computing in workplaces using historical and sociological methods. I ask questions like: what kinds of everyday methods are used in workplaces? What kinds of understandings do people have of the work they do? How do these practices change, and why? More broadly, I am interested in the relationship between institutions, technology and knowledge production. I ask questions like: how are institutions held together? When, and how do they change? Methodologically, I try to answer these questions by analyzing practice.



Past Classes

  (Clicking a class title will bring you to the course's section of the corresponding course catalog)

Z7537: Social Science through the lens of Isaac Asimov's Foundation novels in Splash! 2013 (Nov. 23 - 24, 2013)
Have you ever wondered what economists do? Or sociologists? Or anthropologists? Historians? Political scientists? Geographers? Political economists? Historical sociologists? Yes, they all study some field -- sociology, or history -- but what does that really MEAN? What makes an analysis sociological rather than economic? What kinds of methods do these practitioners use? What kinds of questions do they ask? How do they decide if an issue or phenomenon lies in their field of inquiry? Finally, what do these people actually DO? In this short 3-hour class, we will try to answer these questions. Not, however, by reading stuffy research papers but by using Isaac Asimov's famous novel: Foundation. In this novel (originally published as short stories), Asimov imagines a crumbling Galactic empire and a set of visionaries who aim to save this empire through a science of "psychohistory." Taking Asimov's world seriously, we will ask how the sciences of society work and what they do. At the end of the class, you will have some idea of the differences between the social sciences. Perhaps you will also know what classes you want to take in college!