Category:Fiction: Difference between revisions

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Fiction!  Fiction fires the imagination, and allows us to review past from a safe distance, or to look to the future with our own perspective and share it with the world.
* if you are looking for 'the' literary genre appropriate for the p2p/commons movement, look no further than [[Solarpunk]]


At essence, sharing our personal work is one of the oldest P2P exercises.  We write down what we see in our imagination and tell a story that others can take in.  When they take the story in they are connecting in some way with our imagination, and something new is then again created, the interpretation of the 'reader' or 'viewer' or 'listener,' as the case may be.
* The key S-F book that has inspired much of what we do at the P2P Foundation was 'The Diamond Age' by Neal Stephenson, which describes a fully networked society where the nation-states have largely withered away. The EdgeRyders recommend 'Walkaway' by Cory Doctorow, as an update. Tim Morgan recommends 'Stealing Worlds' by Karl Schroeder. Kim Stanley Robinson's Ministry of the Future also comes highly recommended by many.


Change is a constant when it comes to the ways that creative works are produced.  Authors have choices over new tools, environments, and all manner or ancillary services related to their task. This section deals not only with the final product, the creative work, but also the ways that authors are engaging P2P methods and processes in order to create novel works.
* The EdgeRyder, with [[Econ SF]], coordinated by Alberto Cottica et al., are systematically reviewing contemporary S-F authors that focus on potentially new economic visions, that are in line with p2p dynamics and the commons vision: https://edgeryders.eu/t/econ-sf-a-selection-of-works-and-authors/8582?u=alberto




#Works of Fiction
=Contextual Quote=
##What are some of the works of fiction that are being created drawing on P2P Themes or where P2P Coordination was employed in their creation?
#Format for works
##In what formats are works being created drawing on P2P Themes or where P2P Coordination was employed in their creation?
##Are there cases where [[Peerproperty]] is implicit in the format? 
#Production of Works
##How are fiction works being created using P2P Coordination?
##Are there individuals, groups or organizations that are using P2P Coordination to create works of fiction?
#Authorship
##What authors focus on P2P Themes or use P2P Coordination in the production of fworks of fiction?
##Are there recurring P2P Coordination methods in the ways authors are producing works of fiction?
#Society
##Are there movements, groupings, or categories of works that focus on particular P2P themes?
##Are there P2P themes or P2P Coordination methods that are being 'picked up' and used or reused widely in society?
##What are some of the commons P2P Themes addressed in fiction works?
##How are P2P themes in fiction works being remixed?  Are there P2P Coordination methods involved in the remixing?
#Fiction works as personal property, in Collections, and in the [[Commons]]
##How is [[Peerproperty]] influencing the distribution, manufacture, andor replication of creative works of fiction?
##What are the trends in how people access works of fiction that draw upon P2P Themes or which use P2P Coordination methods for production?


If you are interested in adding an article to this category, or creating a subcategory, you can add this to your page at the bottom:
"Cyberpunk and Solarpunk are actually based on very similar tenets. Both contain the central idea that human nature doesn’t tend to change. The key difference is that Cyberpunk assumes that the worst human traits will dominate, leading greed and exploitation to win out. Consequently, Cyberpunk is full of grimdark dystopian visions and high levels of cynicism. Solarpunk in contrast assumes that the best human traits will dominate, giving more optimistic eutopian (not utopian) visions. Cyberpunk is in reaction to the shiny spacesuits and silver rockets of the 1960s. Solarpunk, in turn, is in reaction to Cyberpunk.
Where Cyberpunk is about nihilism, Solarpunk is about anti-nihilism."


<pre><nowiki>[[Category:Fiction]]</nowiki></pre>
- A solarpunk statement [http://solarpunks.tumblr.com/post/167515987698/a-solarpunk-statement]


Some potential subcategories might be:
*P2P Themes in Creative Works of Fiction
*P2P Coordination Methods for Production of Creative Works
*Fiction Books with P2P Themes


=Key Resources=


#[http://theweeklyansible.tumblr.com/post/20777236577/50-sci-fi-fantasy-works-every-socialist-should 50 Sci-Fi & Fantasy Works Every Socialist Should Read, by China Mieville]
#[http://shareable.net/blog/shareable-futures Shareable Futures]: [http://shareable.net/ Shareable magazine] has a series of s-f fiction stories by Bruce Sterling and others, featuring futures based on sharing and sustainability
#Cory Doctorow: [[Technology Can Be a Force for Liberation]]. Introduction to the Persian edition of the science fiction novel Little Brother, by Cory Doctorow, London, June 2008
#Delicious tags for updates at http://diigo.com/users/mbauwens/P2P-Fiction
=Reviews by P2P Foundation Collaborators=
* Kevin Carson reviews
#The [[Makers]] by Cory Doctorow, http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/review-cory-doctorow-the-makers/2010/02/24
#The [[Caryatids]]. Bruce Sterling, http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/2065-p2p-vs-hollywood/2009/08/26
=Key P2P Fiction=
==Science Fiction==
'''* Bibliographies:'''
# http://io9.gizmodo.com/the-essential-cyberpunk-reading-list-1714180001
'''* Individual Books:'''
# Makers.  Cory Doctorow.  The second industrial revolution -- at the micro scale.
# Daemon and FreedomTM.  Daniel Suarez.  A second American revolution enabled by software.  Resilient communities. 
# Islands in the Net. Bruce Sterling. City state warfare (Singapore vs. Grenada).
# Snow Crash.  Neal Stephenson.  Post nation-state thinking.  "Burbclave" city states vs. "Fedland"  (a bureaucratic nightmare of what's left of the gov't) vs. Criminal corporate franchises.
# The Diamond Age.  Neal Stephenson.  Nanotech warfare.  Nanotech future dissolves global social systems. People respond by recreating historical cultures to give meaning to their lives. 
(http://globalguerrillas.typepad.com/globalguerrillas/2010/12/books-science-fiction.html)


[[Category:P2P Multimedia Directory]]
[[Category:P2P Multimedia Directory]]

Latest revision as of 12:50, 19 February 2023

  • if you are looking for 'the' literary genre appropriate for the p2p/commons movement, look no further than Solarpunk
  • The key S-F book that has inspired much of what we do at the P2P Foundation was 'The Diamond Age' by Neal Stephenson, which describes a fully networked society where the nation-states have largely withered away. The EdgeRyders recommend 'Walkaway' by Cory Doctorow, as an update. Tim Morgan recommends 'Stealing Worlds' by Karl Schroeder. Kim Stanley Robinson's Ministry of the Future also comes highly recommended by many.


Contextual Quote

"Cyberpunk and Solarpunk are actually based on very similar tenets. Both contain the central idea that human nature doesn’t tend to change. The key difference is that Cyberpunk assumes that the worst human traits will dominate, leading greed and exploitation to win out. Consequently, Cyberpunk is full of grimdark dystopian visions and high levels of cynicism. Solarpunk in contrast assumes that the best human traits will dominate, giving more optimistic eutopian (not utopian) visions. Cyberpunk is in reaction to the shiny spacesuits and silver rockets of the 1960s. Solarpunk, in turn, is in reaction to Cyberpunk. Where Cyberpunk is about nihilism, Solarpunk is about anti-nihilism."

- A solarpunk statement [1]


Key Resources

  1. 50 Sci-Fi & Fantasy Works Every Socialist Should Read, by China Mieville
  2. Shareable Futures: Shareable magazine has a series of s-f fiction stories by Bruce Sterling and others, featuring futures based on sharing and sustainability
  3. Cory Doctorow: Technology Can Be a Force for Liberation. Introduction to the Persian edition of the science fiction novel Little Brother, by Cory Doctorow, London, June 2008
  4. Delicious tags for updates at http://diigo.com/users/mbauwens/P2P-Fiction

Reviews by P2P Foundation Collaborators

  • Kevin Carson reviews
  1. The Makers by Cory Doctorow, http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/review-cory-doctorow-the-makers/2010/02/24
  2. The Caryatids. Bruce Sterling, http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/2065-p2p-vs-hollywood/2009/08/26


Key P2P Fiction

Science Fiction

* Bibliographies:

  1. http://io9.gizmodo.com/the-essential-cyberpunk-reading-list-1714180001


* Individual Books:

  1. Makers. Cory Doctorow. The second industrial revolution -- at the micro scale.
  2. Daemon and FreedomTM. Daniel Suarez. A second American revolution enabled by software. Resilient communities.
  3. Islands in the Net. Bruce Sterling. City state warfare (Singapore vs. Grenada).
  4. Snow Crash. Neal Stephenson. Post nation-state thinking. "Burbclave" city states vs. "Fedland" (a bureaucratic nightmare of what's left of the gov't) vs. Criminal corporate franchises.
  5. The Diamond Age. Neal Stephenson. Nanotech warfare. Nanotech future dissolves global social systems. People respond by recreating historical cultures to give meaning to their lives.

(http://globalguerrillas.typepad.com/globalguerrillas/2010/12/books-science-fiction.html)

Pages in category "Fiction"

The following 89 pages are in this category, out of 89 total.