Shamans, Software, and Spleens: Law and the Construction of the Information Society

E593660

Shamans, Software, and Spleens: Law and the Construction of the Information Society is a seminal book by legal scholar James Boyle that critiques intellectual property law and explores how it shapes power, culture, and inequality in the emerging information society.

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Predicate Object
instanceOf book
addresses distributional consequences of intellectual property law
inequality in access to information
power imbalances in information control
associatedWith critical information policy
information commons
public domain movement
author James Boyle NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin United States of America
surface form: United States
critiques commodification of information
enclosure of the public domain
expansion of intellectual property rights
examines construction of the information society through legal rules
relationship between law and culture
relationship between law and technology
field information law
intellectual property studies
law
legal theory
focusesOn how legal categories shape knowledge production
impact of intellectual property on culture
impact of intellectual property on innovation
social construction of property in information
genre intellectual property law
legal scholarship
non-fiction
hasSubject biotechnology and genetic information
copyright law
cultural representations in legal argument
patent law
software and digital technology
influenced critical legal studies of intellectual property
debates on information policy
scholarship on the public domain
intendedAudience academics in information studies and cultural studies
legal scholars
policy makers
language English
mainTopic cultural theory of law
information society
intellectual property
knowledge economy
power and inequality
notableFor early critique of information-age intellectual property regimes
interdisciplinary approach combining law, economics, and cultural theory
perspective attention to rhetoric and metaphors in legal discourse
critical theory of intellectual property
timePeriodDiscussed late 20th century information economy

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James Boyle notableWork Shamans, Software, and Spleens: Law and the Construction of the Information Society