hi all - i have recently published an article on the politics of mass collaboration that uses a wikipedia entry as a case study. the article is primarily about collaboration, and the section on wikipedia is quite elementary, but it might be of interest anyhow. my basic argument is that we need to develop a theory of collaboration that can also speak to the conflicts and political realities of open projects.<br>
<br><a href="http://www.culture-communication.unimelb.edu.au/platform/v2i2_tkacz.html">http://www.culture-communication.unimelb.edu.au/platform/v2i2_tkacz.html</a><br><br><br>abstract:<br><br><em>Working together to produce socio-technological objects, based on emergent platforms
of economic production, is of great importance in the task of political transformation and the
creation of new subjectivities. Increasingly, “collaboration” has become a veritable buzzword
used to describe the human associations that create such new media objects. In the language
of “Web 2.0”, “participatory culture”, “user-generated content”, “peer production” and
the “produser”, first and foremost we are all collaborators. In this paper I investigate recent
literature that stresses the collaborative nature of Web 2.0, and in particular, works that
address the nascent processes of peer production. I contend that this material positions such
projects as what Chantal Mouffe has described as the “post-political”; a fictitious space far
divorced from the clamour of the everyday. I analyse one Wikipedia entry to demonstrate the
distance between this post-political discourse of collaboration and the realities it describes,
and finish by arguing for a more politicised notion of collaboration.</em><br><br><br clear="all">Nate Tkacz <br><br>School of Culture and Communication<br>University of Melbourne<br><br>Twitter: <a href="http://twitter.com/__nate__" target="_blank">http://twitter.com/__nate__</a><br>
<br>Current project: <a href="http://networkcultures.org/wpmu/cpov/about-2/" target="_blank">http://networkcultures.org/wpmu/cpov/about-2/</a><br>