February 4, 2020

From Gerald R. Lucas
Revision as of 09:19, 4 February 2020 by Grlucas (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Large|Notes on “The Californian Ideology”}} Richard Barbrook and Andy Cameron’s 1995 essay “The Californian Ideology” interprets the dominant attitude about techn...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Notes on “The Californian Ideology”

Richard Barbrook and Andy Cameron’s 1995 essay “The Californian Ideology” interprets the dominant attitude about technology as a one that’s both utopian and built on a history of slavery. It traces the logical outcome of an ideology founded on Jeffersonian democracy: a dichotomous approach to technology that embraces both the “hippie radicalism” of an electronic agora[1] and the electronic marketplace of of Eisenhower liberalism. This mix of “cultural bohemianism” and high-tech industry is built on a “new faith” in the “emancipatory potential” of new media,[2] but as Barbrook and Cameron argue, it is ultimately an elitist ideology founded on exclusion and slavery. Ultimately, the essay advocates a convergence of cultural, political, and economic approaches—a “mixed economy”—to support an inclusive electronic infrastructure that guarantees inclusion, promotes a culture of creativity and innovation, and does not depend on an invisible slave class.[3]

. . .

Citations

Work Cited

  • Barbrook, Richard; Cameron, Andy (1995). "The Californian Ideology". Imaginary Futures. Retrieved 2018-08-13. All citations taken from the PDF.