'discourse' Tag

  • Does Habermas Understand the Internet? The Algorithmic Construction of the Blogo/Public Sphere

    January 23, 2010

    This is a paper that I recently got published in gnovis, which is a peer-reviewed journal run entirely by graduate students at Georgetown’s Communication, Culture, and Technology program.  It is a sneakishly Latourian intervention into the debate between Habermasians and post-Habermasians regarding the Internet as a (part of the) public sphere.   They have been [...]

  • Review: Talking About Machines by Julian Orr

    November 8, 2008

    This is a review of Julian Orr’s Talking About Machines, an ethnography of Xerox photocopier technicians. Blurring the line between ethnomethodology, organizational communication, infrastructure studies, human-computer/machine interaction, business administration, and traditional ethnography of work, his study reveals more than just the daily practices of what may initially seem like a boring job.

  • Researching Wikipedia Holistically: A Tentative Approach

    October 11, 2008

    This is a tentative article-length introduction to my thesis on Wikipedia. It is an attempt to analyze Wikipedia from an interdisciplinary perspective that tries to make problematic various assumptions, concepts, and relations that function quite well in the “real world” but are not well-suited to studying Wikipedia. I begin by talking about the nature of [...]

  • Review: 10 Books That Screwed Up the World by Benjamin Wiker

    May 12, 2008

    Benjamin Wiker’s book on bad books throughout the ages is misinformed and makes a few critical errors in its analysis. Specifically, it ignores the cultural context around each book he critiques, treating them as pure subliminal propaganda.

  • The Wikipedian Discourse: A Foucauldian Archaeology

    December 20, 2007

    This paper is a Foucauldian account of power relations as expressed through discourse in the on-line encyclopedia Wikipedia.

  • Response: Patchwork Girl by Shelly Jackson

    April 12, 2007

    This is a response to they hypertext fiction work Patchwork Girl by Shelley Jackson.  It is comprised in part of ‘patches’ of other works, most notably Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein.  I have made this essay entirely out of parts from the novel.

  • Notions of Identity Liberation in Virtual Gaming Communities

    May 5, 2006

    The vast worlds of MMORPGs seem close to postmodern theories of identity, as a player is able to radically constitute their on-line self at will. Despite this, these virtual gaming communities should not be seen as safe spaces in which a subject can realize their true (or ideal) self.

  • Open Source Software: The Newest Specter?

    November 23, 2005

    Corporate adoption of open source software should not be viewed as antithetical to capitalism; rather, it is an example of corporations co-opting Communism to become more capitalist.

 
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