Monday, August 27, 2012

Our Syllabus

Critical Theory B: Peer to Peer Democratization and Anti-Democratization, Fall 2012

Tuesdays, 9-11.45, S#18

Instructor: Dale Carrico

Contact: dcarrico@sfai.edu, ndaleca@gmail.com

Blog: http://p2pdemos.blogspot.com/

Grade: Att/Part 15% , Essay 1 10%, Precis 10%, Report 10%, Essay 2 25%, Final 30%

Provisional Schedule of Meetings

Week One -- August 28

Introductions

Week Two -- September 4

Laurie Anderson: The Language of the Future



Digby (Heather Parton) The Netroots Revolution
Evgeny Morozov Texting Toward Utopia Occupy: Take A Chance



Judith Butler at the People's Mic



Slavoj Zizek at the People's Mic



Seeds of Change: On the Egyptian Revolution



POST FIRST ESSAY ONLINE

Week Three -- September 11

Lawrence Lessig, The Future of Ideas, Chapter Three: Commons on the Wires

Yochai Benkler, Wealth of Networks, Chapter 12: Conclusion

Michel Bauwens, The Political Economy of Peer Production

Week Four -- September 18

John Perry Barlow, A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace

Eric Hughes, A Cypherpunk's Manifesto

Vernor Vinge, Technological Singularity

Marc Steigler, The Gentle Seduction

Week Five -- September 25

Katherine Hayles, Liberal Subjectivity Imperiled: Norbert Weiner and Cybernetic Anxiety

Jaron Lanier, One Half of a Manifesto

Jaron Lanier, First Church of Robotics

Week Six-- October 2

Richard Barbrook and Andy Cameron, California Ideology

Jedediah Purdy, God of the Digirati

Martin Heidegger, The Question Concerning Technology

Week Seven -- October 9

Cory Doctorow You Can't Own Knowledge

Nicholas Wadhams Pharmaceutical Patent Pools Seen As A Life And Death Matter In Kenya

James Boyle, The Second Enclosure Movement and the Construction of the Public Domain

James Boyle, Enclosing the Genome?

David Bollier, Reclaiming the Commons


Week Eight -- October 16

Screening the film, "Desk Set"

SECOND ESSAY DUE IN CLASS

Week Nine -- October 23

Dan Gillmour, We the Media, Chapter One: From Tom Paine to Blogs and Beyond

Save the Internet, Net Neutrality FAQ

Aaron Bady, Julian Assange and the Computer Conspiracy

Week Ten -- October 30

Socially Engaged Art, Critics and Discontents, an Interview with Claire Bishop

Clay Shirky, Blogs and the Mass Amateurization of Publishing

Clay Shirky Why Micropayments Won't Work

Clay Shirky, Here Comes Everybody, Chapter Two: Sharing Anchors Community

Week Eleven -- November 6

David Brin, Three Cheers for the Surveillance Society!

Jamais Cascio, The Participatory Decepticon

Paul D. Miller (DJ Spooky), Material Memories

Week Twelve -- November 13

Charles Mann, Homeland Insecurity

Bruce Schneier, How Science Fiction Writers Can Help, Or Hurt, Homeland Security

Lawrence Lessig, Insanely Destructive Devices

Week Thirteen -- November 20
Thanksgiving Holiday
ALL PRECISES AND REPORTS DUE

Week Fourteen -- November 27

C.S. Lewis, The Abolition of Man

Slavoj Zizek, Bring Me My Philips Mental Jacket

Week Fifteen -- December 4

Steve Mann, The Post-Cyborg Path to Deconism

Donna Haraway, The Promises of Monsters

Bruno Latour Why Has Critique Run Out of Steam?

FINAL PROJECT DUE IN CLASS

Course Objectives:

One -- Introduce students to Science and Technology Studies, Media Studies, and Network Theory, and situate these in respect to broader critical theoretical discourses: Marx on fetishized commodities, Benjamin on auratic media-artifacts, Adorno on the Culture Industry, Barthes on naturalizing myth, Debord on the Spectacle, Chomsky and Herman on propaganda, Klein on the logo.

Two -- Discuss "science" as one among many forms of differently warranted belief (others: moral, legal, familial, instrumental, religious, ethical, political, subcultural, aesthetic); discuss "technoscience" as a particular and usually at once reductive and imperializing figuration and narrativization of the scientific; discuss "technology" as the collective elaboration of agency, not so much as a constellation of artifacts and techniques but as familiarizing and de-familiarizing, naturalizing and de-naturalizing investments of environmental events with significance in the service of particular ends.

Three -- Discuss access-to-knowledge (a2k), end-to-end (e2e), many-to-many, peer-to-peer (p2p) networks, formations, ethoi as occasions for democratizing and anti-democratizing technodevelopmental social struggle; discuss "democracy" not as an eidos we approach but as ongoing interminable experimental implementations of the idea that people should have a say in the public decisions that affect them; discuss "democratization" as the struggle through which ever more people have ever more of a say in the public decisions that affect them.

Four -- Discuss the connection of a2k/p2p-formations and media/network theories grappling with these to relational, social, participatory aesthetic and curatorial practices and theories.

Five -- This course takes as its point of departure the insight that the novelties and perplexities of our experience of emerging p2p-formations are, on the one hand, clarified when understood in light of the unique formulations of Hannah Arendt's political thinking but also that these novelties and perplexities provide, on the other hand, illustrations through which to better understand Hannah Arendt's political thinking in its own right: Discussions will include her delineation of the political (as a site other than the private, the social, the violent, the cultural), her notion of the peer (as someone other than the citizen, the intimate, the colleague, the subject, the celebrity), and her accounts of civitas, revolution, public happiness, futurological think-tanks and AI, and totalitarianism both as manifested historically in Nazism and potentially in neoliberalism.

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