Korinna Patelis- Goldsmiths on Tue, 10 Feb 1998 22:15:51 +0100 (MET) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> Tired of Re-wired & Wired |
Got a copy of Re-wired yesterday, read it and have the following rather opinionated comments to make about the whole debate that has now reached its apotheosis: a)Notions of authenticity are replacing notions of objectivity in Net theory ( I am not sure who assured authors that the former can not be criticized on the same grounds as the latter). Notions of the authentic, first "real" Net users are increasingly underlying Net theory. They usually become particularly prevalent in narrations of the death of the 'pure academic Net" used by "us" and the 'bad commercial take over", which did make it possible for "them" to use the Net, but of course not in the way it was used by "us". Unfortunately this is the underlying theme of Hudson's account (which is at least according to him opinionated and not neutral.) These notions can not only be critisised in the same way any notion of authenticity can (I am assume I don't have to spell out that there are essentialist e.t.c ); they also to easily situate the authentic "old users" as the ideological opponents of those responsible for the commercialisation of the Net ( at the risk of being mis-understood I am not a free-marketier and I am critical of such commercialisation) Above all notions of Net-authenticity herald an other danger: for the majority of citizens in Western Europe, particularly in the Mediterranean having access to the Net was not a possibility until now and even now it is not a possibility for most. For the late-comers there is the feeling that we are about to enter a colony (where a civil war is going on between different groups of aglosaxon men-see note below). b)R. Barbrook , a colleague who I respect a great deal for his contribution to Net-debate, does not to my knowledge want or can possibly bear on his shoulders the opinions, approaches and traditions of a whole continent (by the way I would love it if people were a little more specific when using the term "Europe"; it is not a synonym to Western Europe). Barbrook's and Cameron's work do not represent the Western European voice. Like others I repeat that it would be helpful for both us Western European users and U.S. users to avoid this American/Europe by-polarisation particulary since by "Europe' what is actually meant is Britain. Maybe focus on critiques of public policy in both continents ( "what an old way to solve the new digital problems") or anything else that will get debate out of this state of mourning the "pure Net now lost"'. c)My apologies for not expressing any "digital sensitivity" when stating that it really does get amazingly tiring to watch white Anglo-Saxon men battling about who's territory or ideology the Net expresses. I am sorry if I sound quite rude, not disguising quite a simple objection in fancy words. I think that any public exchange, particularly intellectual exchange should be less emotionally charged and personal, particularly when its claims are not personal but supposedly voice the collective. Finally for those skeptical of my abrupt intervention who are thinking that maybe I am bitter for coming to late to colonise this knowledge space myself and hence my objections are self-motivated I have the following to say; believe me there is enough knowledge space to colonise in Greece ( where I will return and live); in fact the space has not even been created yet for anyone to colonise. It isn't the spotlight I am bitter being late for. It is notions of late and early I am against. Korinna Patelis Korinna Patelis Department of Media and Communications Goldsmiths College-London-SE14 6NW DIRECT LINE 0171-9197243 --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@icf.de and "info nettime" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@icf.de