Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- I Cultural Authority and Neoliberal ‘Modernization’
- II Cultural Democratizations
- Chapter 4 Internet Cultures as Collaborative Creation of Value
- Chapter 5 Combining the Abilities of all the Anyones: The 15M Movement and its Mutations
- Chapter 6 Towards More Democratic Cultural Institutions?
- Epilogue. Cultures of Anyone: A Proposal for Encounters
- Works Cited
- Index
Chapter 6 - Towards More Democratic Cultural Institutions?
from II - Cultural Democratizations
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- I Cultural Authority and Neoliberal ‘Modernization’
- II Cultural Democratizations
- Chapter 4 Internet Cultures as Collaborative Creation of Value
- Chapter 5 Combining the Abilities of all the Anyones: The 15M Movement and its Mutations
- Chapter 6 Towards More Democratic Cultural Institutions?
- Epilogue. Cultures of Anyone: A Proposal for Encounters
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
The Self-Managed Culture in its Life Spaces
Traficantes de Sueños: Sharing conditions of possibility for culture
A few books on a folding table: a small stand for activist literature in El Rastro in Madrid.
The year is 1996, and the germ of what is today the ‘political production and communication project’ known as Traficantes de Sueños, a folding table, practically fits inside a suitcase. Almost 20 years later, this project comprises, among other things, a bookstore, a publisher, a distributor, a design workshop, an activist research group, a permanent program of self-education seminars, and a social space that houses all these and many other activities. In 1996, there probably weren't many people who thought this transformation would happen by ‘giving away’ books. But somehow that's just what happened.
So, essentially, since 1999, when that folding table became a publishing house, Traficantes de Sueños (TdS) has been making digital versions of all their published books freely available to anyone. Besides allowing copying through the use of Creative Commons licenses, TdS has always produced a pdf file of every one of their carefully edited texts, and has put them on its website for downloading. Contrary to what some skeptics claimed, a priori, would happen, people have not taken massive advantage of these ‘free products’ and ‘ruined’ TdS's project or made it unsustainable. Quite the contrary. The determined support for the decommodification of the book as an object, along with other important factors I will discuss, has made TdS's project especially attractive for many people, who, in turn, have found ways to support it. Through their work, TdS has become one of the clearest examples in all of Spain that the basic principles of the free culture can be applied successfully not only to digital resources like software, but also to other types of cultural processes, such as the publication of books.
The researcher and activist Jaron Rowan has published an interesting and exhaustive study about this multifaceted cultural project (2001). He indicates a number of significant factors that contribute to TdS's exponential growth. Beyond just offering free access to their books, they also possess the more general capacity to create infrastructures that others can use to carry out other processes of cultural production.
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- Information
- Cultures of AnyoneStudies on Cultural Democratization in the Spanish Neoliberal Crisis, pp. 232 - 274Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2015