16 lines
1.2 KiB
Markdown
16 lines
1.2 KiB
Markdown
# Free culture
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<blockquote>
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There is so much confusion and misunderstanding about all these elements because they manifest and materialise differently at several levels, via a process of rationalisation that leads to the fragmentation of cultural freedom into new codes of meaning, the ideological and emotional nature
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of which can be contradictory to or incompatible with each other. As a consequence, free culture ends up being simply many different things at once:
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* A toolkit for artists to expand their practice and free themselves from consumerist workflows;
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* A template for political statements against authorities of any kind;
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* A novel creative legal and technical framework to interface with and support existing copyright law practices;
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* A lifestyle, and sometimes fashionable statement to go along with the marketing of all things free and open;
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* An economic model that tries to reconcile the legacy of radical anti-property art practice with the reformist nature of social critique;
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* An aesthetic in the sense of an audiovisual language, like meme culture, but also a number of novelty appropriative frameworks ranging from semionauts to circulationism.
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</blockquote>
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Aymeric Mansoux, Sandbox Culture (2017) - p.377
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