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引用次数: 2
摘要
摘要这项研究批评了新闻业和其他媒体利用早期互联网爱好者约翰·佩里·巴洛(John Perry Barlow)作为来源,在20世纪90年代和2000年代初互联网成为主流通信技术时,对网络自由主义意识形态进行常识性解读的方式。在此期间,记者们利用巴洛,一个没有技术专长但被誉为新技术先知的人,将自由市场和言论的放松管制、保守理想转化为大规模消费的网络自由意志主义。在这个过程中,巴洛和这些记者将互联网的一个核心政治问题非政治化了,这个问题至今仍然存在:应该如何以及在多大程度上对其进行监管。这一时期,网络自由意志主义在流行话语中被放大为doxa,这不仅在新闻界,而且在政策讨论中都有助于阻止互联网的替代概念。
Making common sense of cyberlibertarian ideology: The journalistic consecration of John Perry Barlow
Abstract This study critiques the way in which journalism and other media used John Perry Barlow, an early Internet enthusiast, as a source to make common sense of cyberlibertarian ideology as the Internet emerged as a dominant communications technology in the 1990s and early-2000s. During this period, journalists used Barlow, someone with no technical expertise but a reputation as a prophet of the new technology, to translate the deregulatory, conservative ideals of free markets and speech so central to cyberlibertarianism for mass consumption. In the process, Barlow and these journalists depoliticized a central political question about the Internet that remains today: how and how much it should be regulated. This amplification of cyberlibertarianism as doxa in popular discourses during this period helped foreclose on alternative conceptions of the Internet not only in the press but also in discussions of policy.