Limit search to available items
Book Cover
Book
Author Strangelove, Michael.

Title The empire of mind : digital piracy and the anti-capitalist movement / Michael Strangelove
Published Toronto ; London : University of Toronto Press, [2005]
©2005

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  303.4833 Str/Eom  AVAILABLE
Description 337 pages ; 24 cm
Series Digital futures
Digital futures.
Contents Introduction -- 1. Capitalism and the limits to thought -- 2. Content and the audiences beyond control -- 3. The abnormalization of the internet -- 4. Culture jamming and the transformation of cultural heresies -- 5. Naughty Barbies and greasy clowns -- 6. Utopic capitalism, global resistance and the new public sphere -- Conclusion
Summary "Where many critics see the Internet as an instrument of corporate hegemony, Michael Strangelove sees something else: an alternative space inhabited by communities dedicated to anarchic freedom, culture jamming, alternative journalism, and resistance to authoritarian forms of consumer capitalism and globalization. In The Empire of Mind, Strangelove presents the compelling argument that the Internet and new digital communication technology actually undermine the power of capital, producing an alternative symbolic economy." "Strangelove contends that the Internet breaks with the capitalist logic of commodification and that, while television produces a passive consumer audience, Internet audiences are more active, creative, and subversive. Writers, activists, and artists on the Internet undermine commercial media and its management of consumer behaviour, a behaviour that is challenged by the Web's tendency towards the disintegration of intellectual property rights. Case studies describe the invention of new meaning given to cultural and consumer icons like Barbie and McDonald's and explore how novel modes of online news production alter the representation of the world produced by the mainstream, corporate press." "In the course of exploring new media, The Empire of Mind also makes apparent that digital piracy will not be eliminated. The Internet community effectively converts private property into public, thereby presenting serious obstacles to the management of consumer behaviour and significantly eroding brand value. Much to the dismay of the corporate sector, online communities are uninterested in the ethics of private property. In fact, the entire philosophical framework on which capitalism is based is threatened by these alternative means of cultural production."--BOOK JACKET
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and indexes
SUBJECT Médias http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no92013126 -- Aspect social
Subject Internet -- Social aspects.
Internet -- Aspect social
Piratage (Droit d'auteur) -- Aspect social
Mass media -- Social aspects.
Piracy (Copyright) -- Social aspects.
LC no. 2006274479
ISBN 0802038980 bound
0802038182 paperback