Craig Brozefsky on Tue, 20 Jun 2000 19:00:41 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> [talk given at tulipomania dotcom] |
McKenzie Wark <mwark@laurel.ocs.mq.edu.au> writes: > Since Craig has managed to misunderstand everything, i will, patiently, > as a teacher does, explain it one more time. I'm afraid you have taken my sarcasm for misunderstanding. I undertand your points, but do not agree with the conclusions you have drawn which have lead you to believe that the publishing market will offer a viable lever or alternate income source for academedians to allow them to put pressure on their wage relation with educational institutions. Somehow I have problems seeing, "well, get a second job and ask your boss for a raise" position being tenable, even with the curent academic environment which makes publishing a requirement for most instructors. The journal and trade book publishing industry is tighter than the Sci-Fi genre, and can not in anyway be seen as presenting an alternate livlihood for any but a few stars. I also do not agree with your assertion via questionable anecdote that the loosening of protection of intellectual property, or just it's Fair Use has had any appreciable effect on the coagulation of publishing empires. I agree that such collusion exists, but I don't buy your "cause". Also, it seems that what your proposing is some slight changes in the traditional journal copyright assignment, some re-arrangement of the broken relationship between writers and publishers. My disagreement has nothing to do with some misplaced sympathy for the student who would be forced to decide between a six-pack of Milwaukee's Best or a license for a required text. Lastly, I think by addressing this problem from a position that sees the wage system as an inevitability and strives to assert more control over this relation, will only result in the strengthening of the wage systems control over workers. Take for example the UofCalifornia's student-worker's unionization drive and it's connection with the UAW. The history of the U.S. Labor movement in the last 50 years is a clear indicator that the UAW and the AFL-CIO do not have worker's well-being as their primary goal. If you are indeed going to sugest that the Academedians assimilate some of the tactics of the labor movement, I would suggest you begin by throwing out the unsuccesfuly tactics which has turned the labor movement into corporatist middle-men for capital. This mutation of unions without a goal expanding beyond the wage system into a force for capital is systemic I doubt the Academy could avoid it. -- Craig Brozefsky <craig@red-bean.com> Lisp Web Dev List http://www.red-bean.com/lispweb --- The only good lisper is a coding lisper. --- _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold