From Tactical Media to the Neo-pragmaticsts of the Web

Authors: Garcia, D.

Editors: Balaskas, B.

Journal: Leonardo Electronic Almanac

Volume: 20

Issue: 1

ISSN: 1071-4391

Source: Manual

FROM TACTICAL MEDIA TO THE NEO-PRAGMATISTS OF THE WEB

Authors: Garcia, D.

Journal: Leonardo Electronic Almanac

Volume: Vol 20

Issue: Issue 1

Pages: 124-135

Publisher: Leonardo/ International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology (Leonardo/ISAST)

ISSN: 1071-4391

Abstract:

In this essay I argue that despite the powerful forces seeking to domesti- cate the internet, transforming it from the bio-diversity of a ‘creative com- mons’ into a network of carefully managed ‘walled gardens,’ the drive to expand and intensify the ideal of democracy remains the ‘true north’ of the internet revolution.

I further argue that an expansion of the ideal of democracy based on widening the circle of participation and collaborative expression is linked to the emergence of the ‘user’ as the lead player and primary agent for change replacing both the worker and the more static concept of the consumer. I suggest that the emergence of a ‘user language’ is best under- stood through the theories developed by the cultural theorist de Certeau whose work became influential in the cultural studies milieu of the 1980s.

I show how a decade later a media orientated interpretation of de Cer- teau’s ideas inspired the ‘tactical media’ movement; a distinctive combina- tion of art, technological experimentation, and political activism that arose in the early 1990s and successfully exploited the cracks already appearing in the edifice of traditional broadcast media as the internet began to take hold.

Finally I examine the possibility that unlike the failure of utopian ide- als associated with 20th century broadcast media the equivalent ideals associated with the Internet are proving far more resilient. I conclude by suggesting reasons for the persistence of these emancipatory narratives and examine various experimental platforms suggesting that the utopian avant-garde perspective of the early Internet, though continually under threat, remains a potent force whose energies are far from exhausted.

http://www.leoalmanac.org/

Source: Manual