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E-raamat: Conceptions in the Code: How Metaphors Explain Legal Challenges in Digital Times

(Researcher and Associate Professor in Technology and Social Change, Lund University Internet Institute)
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Stefan Larsson's Conceptions in the Code makes a significant contribution to sociolegal analysis, representing a valuable contribution to conceptual metaphor theory. By utilising the case of copyright in a digital context it explains the role that metaphor plays when the law is dealing with technological change, displaying both conceptual path-dependence as well as what is called non-legislative developments in the law.
The overall analysis draws from conceptual studies of "property" in intellectual property. By using Karl Renner's account of property, Larsson demonstrates how the property regime of copyright is the projection of an older regime of control onto a new set of digital social relations. Further, through an analysis of the concept of "copy" in copyright as well as the metaphorical battle of defining the BitTorrent site "The Pirate Bay" in the Swedish court case with its founders, Larsson shows the historical and embodied dependence of digital phenomena in law, and thereby how normative aspects of the source concept also stains the target domain.
The book also draws from empirical studies on file sharing and historical expressions of the conceptualisation of law, revealing both the cultural bias of both file sharing and law. Also law is thereby shown to be largely depending on metaphors and embodiment to be reified and understood. The contribution is relevant for the conceptual and regulatory struggles of a multitude of contemporary socio-digital phenomena in addition to copyright and file sharing, including big data and the oft-praised "openness" of digital innovation.
Acknowledgments ix
1 How We Understand Technological and Social Change
1(26)
Conceptual Struggles in Societal Change
8(1)
Neutral Infrastructure or Filtering Mediator?
9(5)
Cognition, Law, and Digital Technology
14(2)
Outline of the Book
16(2)
Conceptual Metaphors
18(2)
Copyright as a Case
20(3)
Intended Audience
23(4)
2 Metaphors and Norms
27(28)
Conceptual Metaphor Theory
28(3)
Embodiment
31(3)
Metaphors and Law
34(3)
Cognition and Norms
37(7)
Skeuomorphs and the Conceptualisation of the Digital World
44(5)
Skeuomorphs and Conceptual Path Dependence
49(2)
Summing Up
51(4)
3 The Embodied Law
55(24)
Corpus Juris
56(3)
Embodiment and the Creation of Meaning
59(5)
Seeing the Embodiment: Justice Under Law
64(8)
Discussion: Law Incarnate
72(5)
Conclusions
77(2)
4 Conceptions of Copyright
79(20)
Metaphors We File-Share By
80(8)
Method
88(3)
Findings and Analysis
91(7)
Conclusions
98(1)
5 Copies: A Metaphoric Expansion of Copyright
99(30)
Copies and Their Rights
100(6)
The Pirate Bay Case and the Calculation of Value
106(7)
Analysis: The Problem of Regulating Copies
113(11)
Conclusions: Copy Me Unhappy
124(5)
6 Platform, Storage or Bulletin Board? The Swedish Pirate Bay Court Case
129(30)
Categorisation, Digitalisation, and Law
130(4)
The Pirate Bay
134(4)
The Pirate Bay as a Metaphoric Court Case
138(11)
Liability of the Functions
149(2)
Outlook: Generativity in Decentralisation
151(2)
Normative Implications of Skeuomorphs
153(1)
Conclusions
154(5)
7 Between Form and Function in (Intellectual) Property
159(40)
Between Form and Function
160(1)
Renner and (Intellectual) Property
161(7)
The P in IP
168(8)
Conceptual Legal Change
176(2)
Conceptual Transition of (Intellectual) Property
178(8)
Korperlich and Control
186(10)
Summing Up: Conceptual Legal Change
196(3)
8 Conclusions: Conceptions in the Code
199(28)
Metaphors, Law, and Digitality
200(3)
Conceptual Path Dependence
203(4)
The Digital Challenge to Copyright
207(5)
Metaphors and Power
212(3)
`Invent the age! Invent the metaphor!'
215(6)
Sum: Technology and Social Change
221(6)
References 227(18)
Index 245
Stefan Larsson is Associate Professor in Technology and Social Change at Lund University Internet Institute (LUii) in Sweden, and a sociolegal researcher who studies issues in the intersection of conceptual, legal and social change, particularly in relation to digitisation and the Internet. He holds a PhD in Sociology of Law as well as a PhD in Spatial Planning, and an LLM. He is co-founder of LUii as well as the Cybernorm research group at Lund University, and has led various research projects related to trust in a digital context, open data, law and digital challenges, digital consumption and indebtedness, and more.