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Hackers in hiding

a Foucaultian analysis

Ejvind Hansen

pp. 5-19

On several occasions Michel Foucault advocated a methodological turn towards what he called a "happy positivism". Foucault's emphasis on the surface does not deny the importance of structures of hiding, but understands it as a game in which the structures of hiding are viewed as contingently given. In this paper, I will analyse the conflict between the hacker movement and the field of corporate interests. I argue that the introduction of graphical user interfaces and the maintaining of copyright interests are the contingent background of the ongoing conflict. By bracketing the analyses of hidden intentional structures, the happy positivist is thus able to facilitate deeper understandings of the prevailing structures of hiding.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s13347-014-0182-7

Full citation:

Hansen, E. (2016). Hackers in hiding: a Foucaultian analysis. Philosophy & Technology 29 (1), pp. 5-19.

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