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2026 Participants: Martin Bartelmus * David M. Berry * Gregory Bringman * David Cao * Claire Carroll * Sean Cho Ayres * Hunmin Choi * Jongchan Choi * Lyr Colin * Dan Cox * Christina Cuneo * Orla Delaney * Adrian Demleitner * Pierre Depaz * Mehulkumar Desai * Ranjodh Singh Dhaliwal * Koundinya Dhulipalla * Kevin Driscoll * Iain Emsley * Leonardo Flores * Jordan Freitas * Aide Violeta Fuentes Barron * Erika Fülöp * Tiffany Fung * Sarah Groff Hennigh-Palermo * Gregor Große-Bölting * Dennis Jerz * Joey Jones * Titaÿna Kauffmann * Haley Kinsler * Charu Maithani * Judy Malloy * Eon Meridian * Collier Nogues * Stefano Penge * Marta Perez-Campos * Arpita Rathod * Abby Rinaldi * Ari Schlesinger * Carly Schnitzler * Arthur Schwarz * Haerin Shin * Jongbeen Song * Harlin/Hayley Steele * Daniel Temkin * Zach Whalen * Zijian Xia * Waliya Yohanna * Zachary Mann
CCSWG 2026 is coordinated by Lyr Colin-Pacheco (USC), Jeremy Douglass (UCSB), and Mark C. Marino (USC). Sponsored by the Humanities and Critical Code Studies Lab (USC), the Transcriptions Lab (UCSB), and the Digital Arts and Humanities Commons (UCSB).

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  • @Mace.Ojala Something else that really fascinates me, is this really closely linked relationship that code has to cookbooks. 'Cookbook' and 'recipe' are pretty common terms in programming for reusable/adaptable code and you even have books out like …
  • @Zach_Mann I feel really compelled by your argument: "knitting as hobby, as amateurism, as separate from "serious works" (unlike music composition). It's a thing coded feminine and associated with de-stressing, with anti-work. Programming is often t…
  • @quinnanya I really love your way of wording " Still, I manage to combine existing libraries and snippets of working code I dig up on StackOverflow or elsewhere, stitching them together in unique different ways," because I had never really thought o…
  • I wonder if the concept of "brute force" is transferrable across code and textile work in the same way. Because of the materiality of cloth or yarn, there is a level of "rule breaking" or forcing something to work that I'm not sure works the same wa…
  • Something that has always interested me about thinking through the intersections of domestic work and code is returning to points in history where these things have diverged. Scholars such as Jennifer Light have pointed out that programming was once…
  • Hello everyone! I'm Avery (she/her/hers) and I am a current English PhD student at Northeastern University. My research focuses on thinking about nineteenth-century recipes as algorithms and programmatic writing. I was a computer science major in un…