Living in a networked world means never really getting to decide in any thoroughgoing way who or what enters your “space” (your laptop, your iPhone, your thermostat ... your home). With this as a basic frame-of-reference, James J. Brown’s Ethical Programs examines and explores the rhetorical potential and problems of a hospitality ethos suited to a new era of hosts and guests. Brown reads a range of computational strategies and actors including the general principles underwriting the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP), which determines how packets of information can travel through the internet, to the Obama election campaign’s use of the power of protocols to reach voters, harvest their data, incentivize and, ultimately, shape their participation in the campaign. In demonstrating the kind of rhetorical spaces networked software establishes and the access it permits, prevents, and molds, Brown makes a major contribution to the emergent discourse of software studies as a major component of efforts in broad fields including media studies, rhetorical studies, and cultural studies.
Author(s): James J. Brown, Jr.
Series: Digital Humanities
Edition: 1
Publisher: University Of Michigan Press
Year: 2015
Language: English
Commentary: TruePDF
Pages: 231
Tags: Media Studies; Cultural Studies; Digital Projects; Social Science: Media Studies; Internet: Moral And Ethical Aspects; Computer Software: Social Aspects; Databases: Social Aspects
Cover
Title
Title - Series
Title - Full
Copyright
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Contents
Introduction: The Swarm
1. Web Hosting: Hospitality and Ethical Programs
Part 1: Hospitable Networks
2. Processing Power: Procedural Rhetoric and Protocol
3. Possibility Spaces: Exploits and Persuasion
Part 2: Hospitable Databases
4. Database Integrity: Ethos and the Archive
5. Rhetorical Devices: Database, Narrative, and Machinic Thinking
Conclusion: About, With, In—Hospitality and the Rhetorics of Software
Notes
Bibliography
Index