Any book is a collective process with contributions too numerous to
name. I would like to single out several individuals, without whom
this work would not have been possible. First of all, my wife and partner
Katherine Casey, who bore with me through the long and difficult
process of completing this work. I am also grateful for the support of
my parents, Scott and Sharon, and my brother, Chad. As this book
began as my dissertation project, I would like to thank Paul Smith, my
dissertation chair, for pushing me on questions great and small, as well
as the other members of my committee, Char Miller and J.P. Singh,
for the generosity of their time and effort. I would like to extend those
thanks to the other faculty and affiliates in George Mason
University’s
Cultural Studies program, who provided a continual atmosphere
of
rigorous intellectual inquiry and curiosity at an enviably high level of
sophistication, especially Roger Lancaster, Denise Albanese, Alison
Landsberg, and Matt Karrush. Tim Kaposy and Mark Sample, who
are no longer with the university, provided much appreciated early
guidance. I benefited from numerous conversations and freely given
insights from my peers and colleagues surrounding critical theory,
economics, technology, and politics, which have left an indelible mark
on this work. At the risk of leaving off names, I’d like to thank John
Carl Baker, Julian Duane, Daniel Greene, Asad Haider, Geraldine
Juárez, Kimberly Klinger, Larisa Mann, Wayne Marshall, Salar
Mohandesi,
Zac Petersen, Ryan Vu, and Björn Westergard.
Finally,
I’d
like to thank the pirates whose projects, many now shuttered,
enabled
so much of this research.