Occupy the Heterotopia

Authors

  • James Anderson
  • Kiran Bharthapudi
  • Hao Cao

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29173/irie313

Abstract

In this essay, Foucault's concept “of other spaces” – or, heterotopia – is used to examine the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) movement in the context of systemic crisis. Neoliberalism is marked by innovations that amplify and accelerate contradictions, unfolding the false utopia of finance capitalism. Information and communication technologies (ICTs) helped hyper-financialize the economy, enrich banksters and extend inequalities. Conversely, high-tech developments allow for decentralized decision-making and more direct democracy, paralleling the ethics of OWS. New ICTs compress TimeSpace, opening doors for empathic connections, generating conditions for elevation of collective superstructural consciousness. This paper explores how these conditions create – and are recreated by – heterotopic spaces. Drawing on Foucault's method of heterotopology we throw light on the potential of OWS to prefigure another world, analyzing endeavors to promote cooperative autonomy, and raise consciousness in and through mediated environments, always contested, ever in flux, and inevitably over-(but never pre-)determined.

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Published

2012-12-01

How to Cite

Anderson, James, Kiran Bharthapudi, and Hao Cao. 2012. “Occupy the Heterotopia”. The International Review of Information Ethics 18 (December). Edmonton, Canada:150-68. https://doi.org/10.29173/irie313.