Tuesday, December 4, 2007

More Concerns About the Commons...

Hop into your way-back machines because I'm going to bring us back to Hardt and Negri's work assigned on October 9th. Concerns about the diminishing commons seem to be a point we continue to come back to in this course. Lessig and Boyle most explicitly talk about these concerns, but Hardt and Negri have a bit in the "Informatisation of Production":

"We want to ask, rather, what is the operative notion of the common today, in the midst of postmodernity, the information revolution, and the consequent transformations of the mode of production. It seems to us, in fact, that today we participate in a more radical and profound commonality than has ever been experienced in the history of capitalism. The fact is that we participate in a productive world made up of communication and social networks, interactive services, and common languages. Our economic and social reality is defined less by the material objects that are made and consumed than by co-produced services and relationships. Producing increasingly means constructing cooperation and communicative commonalities.

The concept of private property itself, understood as the exclusive right to use a good and dispose of all wealth that derives from the possession of it, becomes increasingly nonsensical in this new situation. There are ever fewer goods that can be possessed and used exclusively in this framework; it is the community that produces and that, while producing, is reproduced and redefined. The foundation of the classic modern conception of private property is thus to a certain extent dissolved in the postmodern mode of production."

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