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The university as a hackerspace

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-02-07, 17:22 authored by Joss WinnJoss Winn
<p>In a paper published last year, I argued for a different way of understanding the emergence of hacker culture. (Winn 2013) In doing so, I outlined an account of ‘the university’ as an institution that provided the material and subsequent intellectual conditions that early hackers were drawn to and in which they worked.The key point I tried to make was that hacking was originally a form of academic labour that emerged out of the intensification and valorisation of scientific research within the institutional context of the university. The reproduction of hacking as a form of academic labour took place over many decades as academics and their institutions shifted from an ideal of unproductive, communal science to a more productive, entrepreneurial approach to the production of knowledge.As such, I view hacking as a peculiar, historically situated form of labour that arose out of friction in the academy: vocation vs. profession; teaching vs. research; basic vs. applied research; research vs. development; private vs. public; war vs. peace; institutional autonomy vs. state dependence; scientific communalism vs. intellectual property; individualism vs. co-operation.A question I have for you today is whether hacking in the university is still a possibility? Can a university contain (i.e. intellectually, politically, practically) a hackerspace? Can a university be a hackerspace? If so, what does it look like? How would it work? I am trying to work through these questions at the moment with colleagues at the University of Lincoln. The name I have given to this emerging project is ‘The university as a hackerspace’ and it has grown out of an existing pedagogical and political project called ‘Student as Producer.’ It is also one of four agreed areas of work in a new ‘digital education’ strategy at Lincoln. More broadly, our project asks “how do we reproduce the university as a critical, social project?”</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • University of Lincoln (Historic Research Outputs)

Date Submitted

2014-05-25

Date Accepted

2014-05-09

Date of First Publication

2014-05-09

Date of Final Publication

2014-05-09

Event Name

Friction: an interdisciplinary conference on technology & resistance

Event Dates

08-09 May 2014

Date Document First Uploaded

2014-05-23

ePrints ID

14125

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