The Elimination of Uncertainty and the Politics of Enclosure

 

www.anthonymccann.com

music and copyright

Crafting Gentleness

The Hope Archive



 



beyondthecommons
Anthony McCann
 
 
Fáilte romhat, welcome, to Beyond the Commons. I call the site "Beyond the Commons" because while the site does engage with debates about the commons, the primary concern here is with the process and practices of enclosure. I believe we can more helpfully understand enclosure by not simply portraying enclosure as a threat to whatever we understand as "the commons".

To understand enclosure I believe it is helpful to identify resistance to enclosure, to understand the character of expansionary social dynamics and of commodification, and to also understand how we ourselves frequently participate in enclosure. This site is dedicated to an exploration of the social psychology, or rather, the social psychologies of enclosure.

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The writings presented on the Beyond the Commons website primarily deal with issues of music, intellectual property, copyright, and performing rights. They also address wider issues, however. At the very least, the following questions are posed:

'Why might we do the things we do?',

'How might we understand social life in ways which leave the door open for positive transformation in terms of participative personal agency?', and

'How might we understand our experience more subtly, more appropriately in order to minimise the damage effected by well-intentioned actions?'

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Enclosure, He(d)gemony, and the Politics of Gentleness (real media)
This is a guest lecture given by Anthony McCann at the Dept. of Folklore and Ethnology of University College, Cork, in February 2007. It last for about 57 minutes, including some open discussion at the end.

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Feast and Famine: David Martinez in conversation with Iain Boal on scarcity and catastrophe

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Weblog
(Back in operation)

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Recent article on Enclosure and the "Information Commons"(pdf)
available in the journal Information and Communications Technology Law

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Visual representation of Anthony McCann's theory of enclosure (pdf)
Gloss, which I should really put on the diagrams!:
the more the 'influence' variable ascends the pyramid, the more directive the influencing of structuring of expectation ...
the more the 'affect' variable ascends the pyramid the more intense the affective experience ...
the more the 'meaning' variable ascends the pyramid the more the discursive quality of the meaning is associated with the '"elimination" of uncertainty'.

The diagrams make most sense when considered in association with the longer written work and/or the powerpoint presentations on the site.

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Selected Enclosure Bibliography (pdf)

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The 'Contested Commons/ Trespassing Publics' conference in New Delhi

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Mobilities and Enclosures at Borders
This is a link to information about the latest issue of Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power. The abstract begins:

"Our central agenda is to rethink the concept of movement in anthropology and other social sciences. We do this through two themes-mobilities and enclosures-both of which draw our attention to power and its diverse outcomes, especially at borders. Enclosure addresses processes that delimit and restrict the movement of specific goods, people, and ideas, while mobilities concern processes that enable and induce such movements...."

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Towards a Theory of Expansionary Enclosure

This is the powerpoint presentation of a talk entitled "Towards a Theory of Expansionary Enclosure: The Elimination of Uncertainty and the Architectures of Commodification," which I presented at the Bakhtin Centre of the University of Sheffield on November 23, 2004.


"It Seems to be Getting Worse"

This is the powerpoint presentation of a talk entitled "“It seems to be getting worse”: Intellectual Property, Discursive Feedback, and the Commodification of Ethnomusicology," which I presented at the Society for Ethnomusicology annual conference in Tucson, Arizona, on November 6, 2004.

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Position Paper Oct.'04: Enclosure Within and Without the Commons

(This paper is no longer linked and has been superceded by this one)

Over the last number of years I have been focusing on the expansion of intellectual property discourses and practices among those who involve themselves in Irish traditional culture. In particular, my theoretical focus has turned to the analysis of expansionary social dynamics that involve the accelerative commodification of everyday life.In this paper I will address some of the ways in which my attempts to use resource management models of common property theory left me unable to explain many of the aspects of the social situations and social dynamics that I encountered. I will also explain how it is that I have turned from models of “the commons” to a model of “enclosure” in a bid to come to less partial and more adequate analyses of expansion and commodification, and to more reflective and reflexive understandings of whatever “the commons” is taken to mean. A brief overview of a new theory of commodification will be presented, and through this it will be argued that many of the social situations that we characterize as environments of common property may also be characterized as environments of enclosure, thus providing us with far greater explanatory power than the limiting models of resource management. It will further be suggested that our emphasis on common property and the commons may be seriously misleading, and that we might be better served focusing on the relational implications of expansion and commodification, that is, enclosure (without the commons).

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Click on the links below to take you where you want to go!

Crafting Gentleness

Towards an Understanding of Enclosure

The Hope Archive

Feedback

Basic Information about Anthony McCann

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