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AbstractCultural Anthropology
May 2005, Vol. 20, No. 2, pp. 185-214
Posted online on May 9, 2005.
(doi:10.1525/can.2005.20.2.185)
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Geeks, Social Imaginaries, and Recursive Publics Christopher Kelty Rice University
Concepts: Internet, public sphere, hackers, technology, software, intellectual property This article investigates the social, technical, and legal affiliations among “geeks” (hackers, lawyers, activists, and IT entrepreneurs) on the Internet. The mode of association specific to this group is that of a “recursive public sphere” constituted by a shared imaginary of the technical and legal conditions of possibility for their own association. On the basis of fieldwork conducted in the United States, Europe, and India, I argue that geeks imagine their social existence and relations as much through technical practices (hacking, networking, and code writing) as through discursive argument (rights, identities, and relations). In addition, they consider a “right to tinker” a form of free speech that takes the form of creating, implementing, modifying, or using specific kinds of software (especially Free Software) rather than verbal discourse. This paper has been cited by: Getting Noticed, Showing-Off, Being Overheard: Amateurs, Authors and Artists Inventing and Reinventing Themselves in Online Communities SUSAN FAULKNER, JAY MELICAN Ethnographic Praxis in Industry Conference Proceedings2007:1,51-65 Abstract | PDF (870 KB) | PDF Plus (870 KB) |
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