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Publics and Counterpublics

TLDR
The idea of a public is one of the central fictions of modern life as mentioned in this paper, and it has powerful implications for how our social world takes shape, and much of modern lives involves struggles over the nature of publics and their interrelations.
Abstract
Most of the people around us belong to our world not directly, as kin or comrades, but as strangers. How do we recognize them as members of our world? We are related to them as transient participants in common publics. Indeed, most of us would find it nearly impossible to imagine a social world without publics. In the eight essays in this book, Michael Warner addresses the question: What is a public?According to Warner, the idea of a public is one of the central fictions of modern life. Publics have powerful implications for how our social world takes shape, and much of modern life involves struggles over the nature of publics and their interrelations. The idea of a public contains ambiguities, even contradictions. As it is extended to new contexts, politics, and media, its meaning changes in ways that can be difficult to uncover.Combining historical analysis, theoretical reflection, and extensive case studies, Warner shows how the idea of a public can reframe our understanding of contemporary literary works and politics and of our social world in general. In particular, he applies the idea of a public to the junction of two intellectual traditions: public-sphere theory and queer theory.

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Dissertation

The Appsmiths: Community, Identity, Affect And Ideology Among Cocoa Developers From Next To Iphone

Hansen Hsu
TL;DR: This chapter discusses programming languages and APIs, which exhibit their own form of constraints and affordances, and how different programmers express strong preferences for particular languages best match how the programmer has become accustomed to thinking, reducing frustration and increasing pleasure.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Fate of Style in an Age of Intellectual Property

Trevor Ross
- 01 Jan 2013 - 
TL;DR: The copyright debate of the eighteenth century was informed by two antithetical accounts of style: from an older rhetorical view that stressed language's refinement was derived the idea/expression dichotomy, the principle that copyright protects not a work's ideas but only its arrangement of words as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anthropology as irony and philosophy, or the knots in simple ethnographic projects

TL;DR: In this article, the idea of "anthropological knots" is introduced, which is a metaphor for the pursuit of knowledge about ourselves, and is a performance that is woven, knotted together in the encounter of differing viewpoints.
Journal ArticleDOI

Eyes wide open: stranger hospitality and the regulation of youth citizenship

TL;DR: The authors examine the three aforementioned fields of discourse and practice as they have operated broadly over the past decade in Canada, Britain and the United States, and show how strangers are made difficult and dangerous others for...

"But I Want That One": Consumer Citizenship and the Politics of Exclusion, Public Space and Homelessness in the Gay Ghetto

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe how commodities are "promiscuously" displayed by homeless queer youth in San Francisco in their attempts to pass as not only normal, but affluent, and argue that when a youth successfully displays the signs of these commodities, they become part of a prosthetic shield that wraps around him or her.
References
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Journal Article

The structural transformation of the public sphere : an inquiry into a category of bourgeois society

TL;DR: A preliminary demarcation of a type of Bourgeois public sphere can be found in this article, where the authors remark on the type representative publicness on the genesis of the Bourgois Public Sphere.
Book

Lenin and Philosophy and Other Essays

TL;DR: Althusser's "For Marx" (1965) and "Reading Capital" (1968) had an enormous influence on the New Left of the 1960s and continues to influence modern Marxist scholarship as mentioned in this paper.
Book

Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace

TL;DR: Harvard Professor Lawrence Lessig shows how code can make a domain, site, or network free or restrictive; how technological architectures influence people's behavior and the values they adopt; and how changes in code can have damaging consequences for individual freedoms.