Rhet 166:
DIGITAL DEMOCRATIZATION & ANTIDEMOCRATIZATION UNDER THE LAW
Instructor: Dale Carrico: dcarrico@sfai.edu, ndaleca@gmail.com
Course Blog: https://digidemosunderlaw.blogspot.com/2017/06/our-syllabus.html
Meetings: July 3-August 11, 2017, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays, 2-4.30pm,
140 Barrows Hall
Rough Basis for Final Grade,
subject to contingencies -- Participation/Attendance, 15%; Reading
Notebook, 15%; Toulmin/Precis, 2-3pp., 15%; Presentation, 15%; Final
Paper, 6-8pp. 40%.
Course Description
How did the promise of
peer-to-peer participatory democracy devolve into twitter harassment, doxxing,
toxic comment sections, and zero comments? Is techno-progressive
"disruption" merely reactionary deregulation, venture capitalist
"innovation" merely marketing hyperbole, futurological
"acceleration" merely social precarization, tech's vaunted
"sharing economy" merely a digital sharecropping society, its
"openness" vacuity, its "participation" another form of
television? How did early legal and political squabbles over privacy and
property online set the stage for our current distress? How might the
"end-to-end principle" defining internet architecture across its many
layers comport with the ideologically reactionary figure of "negative
liberty" playing out in generations of anarchic, spontaneist, populist
online activism? What are the politics of a digitality figured as an immaterial
spirit realm, when digital networks abet financial fraud and military
surveillance via an "internet" powered by coal smoke, accessed on
toxic landfill-destined devices manufactured by wage slaves in overexploited
regions of the real world? Setting aside the logical possibility and
engineering plausibility of "artificial intelligence" does AI as a
rhetorical trope in legal and cultural discourse facilitate and rationalize
unaccountable algorithmic mediation and muddy our thinking about
"autonomous" weapons systems? How does social media facilitate the
transformation of factual disputes over climate change, harm reduction, and the
macroeconomics of public investment into polarizing culture wars? Are there
appropriate and appropriable techniques at hand through which democratizations
might resist these degradations? Might "The Future" still be more
evenly distributed? Can we still count on the street finding its own uses for
things?
Week One
Tuesday, July 4 Holiday
Wednesday, July 5 Introductions
Thursday, July 6
Week Two
Tuesday, July 11
-- John Maynard Keynes, from "Europe
Before the War"
-- Lawrence Lessig, from
Code, Chapter 1, "Code Is Law,"
pp. 1-8; and Chapter 7, "What Things Regulate" pp. 120-137.
-- Lawrence Lessig, from
The Future of Ideas, Freedom on the
Wires, Chapters 2-3, Building Blocks and Commons on the Wires, pp. 19-48.
Thursday, July 13
Week Three
Tuesday, July 18
Wednesday, July 19
Thursday, July 20 (Precis/Toulmin due following Tuesday)
Week Four
Tuesday, July 25
Wednesday, July 26
Thursday, July 27
Week Five
Tuesday, August 1 Screen film, Colossus: The Forbin Project
Wednesday, August 2
Thursday, August 3 Final Paper Workshop
Week Six
Tuesday, August 8 Poetry Reading/Individual Meetings
Wednesday, August 9
-- Jarett Kobek, I Hate the
Internet (novel to purchase): We Heard You Like Books (2016).
ISBN-10: 0996421807 ISBN-13: 978-0996421805/Individual
Meetings
Thursday, August 10 Concluding Remarks (Hand in Final Paper, 6-8pp.)
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