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- Title
WESTERN FRONTIER OR FEUDAL SOCIETY?: METAPHORS AND PERCEPTIONS OF CYBERSPACE.
- Authors
Yen, Alfred C.
- Abstract
This Article examines how metaphors influence perceptions of cyberspace. Among other things, the Article studies the comparison of cyberspace to the American western frontier and the metaphor's construction of cyberspace as a "place" whose natural characteristics guarantee freedom and opportunity. This supports an often-made claim that cyberspace is different from real space, and that government should generally refrain from regulating the Internet. The Article surveys the basis of the Western Frontier metaphor in academic history and popular culture, and concludes that the metaphor misleads people to overestimate cyberspace's "natural" ability to guarantee freedom and opportunity. The Article accomplishes this, in part, by offering feudal society as a metaphor for cyberspace and showing how prominent features of cyberspace correspond to key components of feudal society. The Article does not claim that cyberspace is thoroughly feudal, but it does argue that the feudal society metaphor valuably dislodges the Western Frontier metaphor and reminds us that law has an important role to play in shaping the future of the Internet.
- Subjects
UNITED States; CYBERSPACE; WEST (U.S.) in mass media; FEUDALISM
- Publication
Berkeley Technology Law Journal, 2002, Vol 17, Issue 4, p1207
- ISSN
1086-3818
- Publication type
Article