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[Commlist] New book: Digital Pirates
Tue Aug 04 08:55:14 GMT 2020
We would like to announce a new publication from Stanford University
Press, which we hope will be of interest.
*Digital Pirates***
Policing Intellectual Property in Brazil
*Alexander Sebastian Dent***
*_https://www.combinedacademic.co.uk/9781503612976/digital-pirates/_*
*__*
*Receive a 20% discount online:*
*CSLS2020*
“Smart, sly, and generatively disconcerting, /Digital Pirates/is an
ethnographically textured and theoretically rambunctious charting of
emerging mediascapes. Dent provides a complex and challenging account of
contemporary Brazil and a principled exploration of the unpredictable
resonances at the contested confluence of media, technology, regulatory
regimes, and creativity. And he does so with piratical panache.”*—Donald
L. Brenneis, University of California, Santa Cruz *
“/Digital Pirates /is an insightful and often beautiful exploration of
digitization as a dissolving agent for older cultural forms, a catalyst
for new ones, and a context for reconsolidating the boundaries that
define markets, institutions, laws, and publics. Alex Dent moves fluidly
between theoretical and empirical registers to weave a rich account of
lived experience in Brazil that illuminates global cultural
change.”*—Joe Karaganis, Columbia University*
/Digital Pirates/examines the unauthorized creation, distribution, and
consumption of movies and music in Brazil. Alexander Sebastian Dent
offers a new definition of piracy as indispensable to current capitalism
alongside increasing global enforcement of intellectual property (IP).
Complex and capricious laws might prohibit it, but piracy remains a core
activity of the twenty-first century.
Combining the tools of linguistic and cultural anthropology with models
from media studies and political economy, /Digital Pirates/reveals how
the dynamics of IP and piracy serve as strategies for managing the gaps
between texts—in this case, digital content. Dent’s analysis includes
his fieldwork in and around São Paulo with pirates, musicians,
filmmakers, police, salesmen, technicians, policymakers, politicians,
activists, and consumers. Rather than argue for rigid positions, he
suggests that Brazilians are pulled in multiple directions according to
the injunctions of international governance, localized pleasure, magical
consumption, and economic efficiency. Through its novel theorization of
“digital textuality,” this book offers crucial insights into the
qualities of today’s mediascape as well as the particularized political
and cultural norms that govern it. The book also shows how twenty-first
century capitalism generates piracy and its enforcement simultaneously,
while producing fraught consumer experiences in Latin America and beyond.
*Alexander Sebastian Dent*is Associate Professor of Anthropology &
International Affairs at George Washington University.
*Stanford University Press**| July 2020 | 208pp | 9781503612976 | PB |
£20.99**
*Price subject to change.
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