Document details

Stealing Empire: P2P, Intellectual Property and Hip-Hop Subversion

Cape Town: HSRC Press (2008), xxiv, 264 pp.

Contains bibliobr. pp. 238-250, index

ISBN 978-0-7969-2209-0

"Stealing Empire poses the question, "What possibilities for agency exist in the age of corporate globalisation?" Using the work of Antonio Negri and Michael Hardt as a point of entry, Adam Haupt delves into varied terrain to locate answers in this ground-breaking inquiry. He explores arguments about copyright via peer-to-peer (P2P) platforms such as Napster, free speech struggles, debates about access to information and open content licenses, and develops a politically incisive analysis of counterdiscourses produced by South African hip-hop artists. From empire stealing through their commodification of countercultures to the stealing empire activities of file-sharers, culture jammers and hip-hop activists, this book tells the story of people defining themselves as active, creative agents in a consumerist society." (Publisher description)
1 Reading Empire, 1
2 Hollywood and subversion in the age of Empire, 38
3 The technology of subversion, 66
4 Enclosure of the commons and the erosion of democracy, 100
5 Hip-hop, gender and co-option in the age of Empire, 142
6 Hip-hop, counterpublics and noise in post-apartheid South Africa, 183
Conclusion, 2016