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Hacking Europe Gerard Alberts

Hacking Europe By Gerard Alberts

Hacking Europe by Gerard Alberts


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Summary

Local hacker communities appropriated the computer and forged new cultures around it like the hackers in Yugoslavia, Poland and Finland, who showed off their tricks and creating distinct demoscenes. Together the essays reflect a diverse palette of cultural practices by which European users domesticated computer technologies.

Hacking Europe Summary

Hacking Europe: From Computer Cultures to Demoscenes by Gerard Alberts

Hacking Europe traces the user practices of chopping games in Warsaw, hacking software in Athens, creating chaos in Hamburg, producing demos in Turku, and partying with computing in Zagreb and Amsterdam. Focusing on several European countries at the end of the Cold War, the book shows the digital development was not an exclusively American affair. Local hacker communities appropriated the computer and forged new cultures around it like the hackers in Yugoslavia, Poland and Finland, who showed off their tricks and creating distinct demoscenes. Together the essays reflect a diverse palette of cultural practices by which European users domesticated computer technologies. Each chapter explores the mediating actors instrumental in introducing and spreading the cultures of computing around Europe. More generally, the ludological element--the role of mischief, humor, and play--discussed here as crucial for analysis of hacker culture, opens new vistas for the study of the history of technology.

Hacking Europe Reviews

Hacking Europe fills a glaring hole in the history of computing. ... Hacking Europe enterprise opens a whole new area of research, one that could strengthen many adjacent areas of investigation. ... Hacking Europe delivers consistent structure, points, and purpose across diverse articles, all in all contributing to the historically specific, geographically aware, use-centered study of computing cultures. (Maxigas, IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, Vol. 38 (3), July-September, 2016)

Hacking Europe should pique the curiosity of anyone interested in Cold War technoscience. ... Both readers familiar with history of computing literature and those interested in modern Europe are guaranteed to find something unexpected here ... . Beyond the abundance of original material in each of the nine individual chapters, the contributions and an editorial piece in combination present a number of thought-provoking puzzles for a historian of modern science. (Ksenia Tatarchenko, ISIS, Vol. 107 (2), June, 2016)

The wealth, diversity and international character of the contributions makes the volume an extraordinary insightful and entertaining read ... . Given the popularity of approaches towards social (co-)construction of technology, one can hope that the assembled contributions will spur a stronger interest in the history of home computers, their social meanings, and the subcultures that arose around them. In this domain, this volume will always remain a milestone. (Gleb J. Albert, European History Quarterly, Vol. 46 (1), 2016)

Table of Contents

Introduction: How European Players Captured the Computer and Created the Scenes
Gerard Alberts and Ruth Oldenziel

Part I: Appropriating America: Making One's Own

Transnational (Dis)connection in Localizing Personal Computing in the Netherlands, 1975-1990
Frank Veraart

Inside a Day You'll be Talking to it Like an Old Friend: The Making and Remaking of Sinclair Personal Computing in 1980s Britain
Thomas Lean

Legal Pirates Ltd: Home Computing Cultures in Early 1980s Greece
Theodore Lekkas

Part II: Illegitimate Sons in Between: Scences

Galaxy and the New Wave: Yugoslav Computer Culture in the 1980s
Bruno Jakic

Playing and Copying: Social Practices of Home Computer Users in Poland During the 1980s
Patryk Wasiak

Multiple Users, Diverse Users: Demoscene and the Appropriation of the Personal Computer by Demoscene Hackers
Antti Silvast and Markku Reunanen

Part III: Going Public: How to Change the World

Heroes Yet Criminals of the German Computer Revolution
Kai Denker

How Amsterdam Invented the Internet: European Networks of Significance 1980-1995
Caroline Nevejan and Alec Badenoch

Users in the Dark: The Development of a User-Controlled Technology in the Czech Wireless Network Community
Johan Soederberg

Additional information

NPB9781447154921
9781447154921
1447154924
Hacking Europe: From Computer Cultures to Demoscenes by Gerard Alberts
New
Hardback
Springer London Ltd
2014-09-12
269
N/A
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