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Published byEverett Archibald Wilcox Modified over 9 years ago
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The Metaphor Thing Representing social movements by network metaphors Marianne van den Boomen (Marianne.vandenBoomen@let.uu.nl)
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Naomi Klein, The Vision Thing
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Analogy with the Internet intricately and tightly linked as “hotlinks” connect their websites facilitates & shapes the movement in its own image sparse bureaucracy and hierarchy organic, decentralised, interlinked pathways of the Internet the Internet come to life
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TARGET DOMAIN political organising no clear leadership and followers disparate campaigns, scattered, non-lineair convergence, shared belief, emerging consensus hybrid pattern of dispersal and convergence intricately and tightly linked to one another
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SOURCE DOMAIN The Internet ‘hotlinks’, ‘websites’ and ‘connections’ hybrid pattern of dispersal and convergence ‘intricately and tightly linked to one another… …as “hotlinks” connect their websites to the Internet’ hotlinks: subject/object displacement & condensation
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More than coincidental Not only a tool, it is also ‘shaping the movement in its own image’: ‘sparse bureaucracy, minimal hierarchy, loose information swapping’ The image of the Internet shapes the movement… Internet is shaping the image the movement has of itself…
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From tool to mirror ‘mirrors the organic, decentralised, interlinked pathways of the Internet -- the Internet come to life’ from a tool it has become a mirror, and the mirror subsequently becomes a shaping machine
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The Metaphor Thing Metaphors are actors Bruno Latour: actor-network theory Lakoff and Johnson: source and the target domain Moving targets, moving sources
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Depresented unused parts 1 Protocols: agreements carved in software which regulates how data streams flow along the channels The Internet is a set of nested and layered protocols TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol) –small data packets –direct to destination –reassemble on arrival –non-hierarchical, horizontal –unique IP-number –different routes
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Depresented unused parts 2 Other protocols on top of TCP/IP HTTP (Hyper Text Transfer Protocol) to browse websites SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) to send mail DNS-protocol (Domain Name System) to translate domain names to IP-numbers FTP, et cetera Servers and clients! Web servers, web clients; mail servers, mail clients etc We are clients who pay a subscription fee We use clients (application programs)
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Nested and layered protocols TCP/IP: structurally non-hierarchical Other protocols: hierarchical client-server architecture Client-server split is a material division of labour = an asymmetrical division of power and control Bureaucracy is translated into protocological infrastructure Hierarchy is translated into the client-server architecture
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Distributed network topologies A distributed computer system is an application that consists of components running on different computers concurrently (web page: client-server, bricolage, DNS, TCP/IP etc) Distributedness does not by itself imply anything about hierarchy, centralisation or decentralisation
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Distributed network topologies HierarchicalCentralised DecentralisedHybrid
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P2P file sharing systems files not stored on a central server downloading directly from other clients/peers good old P2P, purely decentralised?
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P2P file sharing systems no direct channel of transmission between peers routing of the files must always pass along providers servers P2P = parasitical layer You are what you use…
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Conclusions In what regards can the new political organising be conceptualised as analogies of the Internet? protocols and topologies? depresented local centralities, hierarchies? clients and servers? P2P-networking? parasitic peers? Mark Poster: Tool -> social space -> subjects Tool -> mirror -> shaping thing -> subject/objects
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