Haigh, Thomas2023-09-182023-09-1820232567–2517https://mediarep.org/handle/doc/21259Modern discourses emphasizes electronic immateriality as the defining feature of digital technology. The idea that digits might be digital when punched onto cards, or even written on a piece of pa- per, is no longer intuitive. Yet by reconstructing the context in which the categories of digital and analog were first distinguished histori- cally in the 1940s, I argue that the concept of digitality is rooted in the mechanical representation of digits in early computers, which con- temporary observers immediately recognized was shared with earlier technologies such as telephone switching systems, punched cards, and calculating devices. Digitality is not a feature of an object itself, but of the way that object is read (whether by human or by machine) as encoding symbols chosen from a finite set. In conclusion, digitality is constituted through reading practices.engDefningDigitalitiesDigitalDigits700Defining Digitalities I: What’s Digital about Digits?doi.org/10.25819/ubsi/1025910.25969/mediarep/20046