“Jack In, Young Pioneer”: Frontier Politics, Ecological Entrapment, and the Architecture of Cyberspace

IF 0.6 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE, AMERICAN AMERICAN LITERATURE Pub Date : 2021-07-26 DOI:10.1215/00029831-9361251
Suzanne F. Boswell
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Abstract

This essay uncovers the environmental and historical conditions that played a role in cyberspace’s popularity in the 1980s and 1990s. Tracing both fictional and critical constructions of cyberspace in a roughly twenty-year period from the publication of William Gibson’s Sprawl trilogy (1984–1988) to the Telecommunications Act of 1996, this essay argues that cyberspace’s infinite, virtual territory provided a solution to the apparent ecological crisis of the 1980s: the fear that the United States was running out of physical room to expand due to overdevelopment. By discursively transforming the technology of cyberspace into an “electronic frontier,” technologists, lobbyists, and journalists turned cyberspace into a solution for the apparent American crisis of overdevelopment and resource loss. In a period when Americans felt detached from their own environment, cyberspace became a new frontier for exploration and a so-called American space to which the white user belonged as an indigenous inhabitant. Even Gibson’s critique of the sovereign cyberspace user in the Sprawl trilogy masks the violence of cybercolonialism by privileging the white American user. Sprawl portrays the impossibility of escaping overdevelopment through cyberspace, but it routes this impossibility through the specter of racial contamination by Caribbean hackers and Haitian gods. This racialized frontier imaginary shaped the form of internet technologies throughout the 1990s, influencing the modern user’s experience of the internet as a private space under their sovereign control. In turn, the individualism of the internet experience restricts our ability to create collective responses to the climate crisis, encouraging internet users to see themselves as disassociated from conditions of environmental and social catastrophe.
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“青年先锋杰克”:边疆政治、生态陷阱与网络空间架构
本文揭示了在20世纪80年代和90年代网络空间的流行中发挥作用的环境和历史条件。从威廉·吉布森(William Gibson)的《蔓延三部曲》(Sprawl trilogy)出版(1984-1988)到1996年的《电信法》(Telecommunications Act),这篇文章在大约20年的时间里追溯了网络空间的虚构和批判结构,认为网络空间的无限、虚拟领域为20世纪80年代明显的生态危机提供了一个解决方案:人们担心美国由于过度发展而耗尽了扩张的物理空间。通过将网络空间技术转化为“电子前沿”,技术专家、游说者和记者们将网络空间变成了解决美国过度发展和资源流失危机的一种解决方案。在美国人感到与自己的环境脱节的时期,网络空间成为了探索的新前沿,成为了白人用户作为土著居民所归属的所谓美国空间。就连吉布森在《蔓延》三部曲中对网络空间主权用户的批判,也通过给予美国白人用户特权,掩盖了网络殖民主义的暴力。《蔓延》描绘了通过网络空间逃避过度开发的不可能性,但它通过加勒比黑客和海地神的种族污染的幽灵来实现这种不可能性。这种种族化的边界想象塑造了整个20世纪90年代互联网技术的形式,影响了现代用户将互联网作为他们主权控制下的私人空间的体验。反过来,互联网体验的个人主义限制了我们对气候危机做出集体反应的能力,鼓励互联网用户将自己视为与环境和社会灾难脱节的人。
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来源期刊
AMERICAN LITERATURE
AMERICAN LITERATURE LITERATURE, AMERICAN-
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
20.00%
发文量
27
期刊介绍: American Literature has been regarded since its inception as the preeminent periodical in its field. Each issue contains articles covering the works of several American authors—from colonial to contemporary—as well as an extensive book review section; a “Brief Mention” section offering citations of new editions and reprints, collections, anthologies, and other professional books; and an “Announcements” section that keeps readers up-to-date on prizes, competitions, conferences, grants, and publishing opportunities.
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