Bellamy's Rage and Beer's Conscience: Towards a Pirate Methodology

Author:

Arvanitakis James,Fredriksson Martin,Schillings Sonja

Abstract

Over the last decade piracy has emerged as a growing field of research covering a wide range of different phenomena, from fashion counterfeits and media piracy, through to 17th century buccaneers and present-day pirates off the coast of Somalia. In many cases piracy can be a metaphor or an analytical perspective to understand conflicts and social change. This article relates this fascination with piracy as a practice and a metaphor to academia and asks what a pirate methodology of knowledge production could be: how, in other words, researchers and educators can be understood as ‘pirates’ to the corporate university. Drawing on the history of maritime piracy as well as on a discussion on contemporary pirate libraries that disrupt proprietary publishing, the article explores the possibility of a pirate methodology as a way of acting as a researcher and relating to existing norms of knowledge production. The methodology of piratical scholarship involves exploiting the grey zones and loopholes of contemporary academia. It is a tactical intervention that exploits short term opportunities that arise in the machinery of academia to the strategic end of turning a limiting structure into an enabling field of opportunities. We hope that such a concept of pirate methodologies may help us reflect on how sustainable and constructive approaches to knowledge production emerge in the context of a critique of the corporate university.

Publisher

Linkoping University Electronic Press

Subject

Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Anthropology,Cultural Studies

Reference33 articles.

1. Aksikas, Jaafar & Sean Andrew Johnson (2014): 'Neoliberalism, Law and Culture: A Cultural Studies Intervention after "The Juridical Turn": Introduction', Cultural Studies, 28(5-6), 742-780.

2. Arvanitakis, James & Martin Fredriksson (2017) (eds.): Property, Place and Piracy, Routledge, London.

3. Bodó, Balasz (2015): 'Libraries in the Post Scarcity Era', Porsdam, Helle (ed.): Copyrighting Creativity: Creative Values, Cultural Heritage Institutions and Systems of Intellectual Property, Farnham: Ashagate, 75-92.

4. Dennis, Michael A. (2016): 'Our Monsters, Ourselves: Reimagining the Problem of Knowledge in Cold War America'. Dreamscapes of Modernity: Sociotechnical Imaginaries and the Fabrication of Power, Sheila Jasanoff and Sang-Hyun Kim (eds.) Chicago/London: Chicago UP, 56-78: 57.

5. Piracy as Method: Nine Theses on Law and Literature.;Sutter;Law and Humanities,2011

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