The New Enlightenment and the Fight to Free Knowledge
By Peter B. Kaufman
By Peter B. Kaufman
By Peter B. Kaufman
By Peter B. Kaufman
Category: World History
Category: World History
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$18.95
Feb 24, 2021 | ISBN 9781644210604
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Feb 23, 2021 | ISBN 9781644210611
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Praise
“Peter B. Kaufman’s call for a new Enlightenment couldn’t be more timely, or more necessary. His polemic against those who purport to own knowledge shows that knowledge is freedom and can belong to all or to none. The choice is ours.” —Edward Snowden
“Mellifluous, intelligent, erudite—a pleasure to read.” —Charles Nesson, William F. Weld Professor of Law at Harvard Law School and founder of the Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society at Harvard
“Kaufman’s brilliant exposition of the need for an online Fifth Estate and his ardent support of an online creative commons are both timely and convincing. Everyone who draws on the web for research and intellectual inspiration should read this book.” —Michael Scammell, author, Solzhenitsyn: A Biography and Koestler: The Literary and Political Odyssey of a Twentieth-Century Skeptic and founding editor, Index on Censorship
“Rigorous and eloquent … a passionate proposal.” —Kathelin Gray, Los Angeles Review of Books
“Peter Kaufman has provided a powerful argument for the right of all of us to know. In forceful prose, he explains how information has been controlled from the invention of printing to today. But, he argues, thanks to the internet, we can still win the battle to create the full and free access to knowledge necessary for self-governing. This is a book that will spearhead debate in the twenty-first century.” —Alice Kessler-Harris, R. Gordon Hoxie Professor of History, Emerita, Columbia University
“Peter Kaufman mounts an impassioned yet prodigiously documented argument for making the public sphere a public good. He surveys a wide swath of the past three centuries, from the Enlightenment’s Encyclopedia, through the would-be intellectual seedlings of samizdat underground publications under totalitarianism, to the current maelstrom of data and content left unbridled in the hands of private corporations. From this, he delivers a historically informed account of the striving for information treated not as a commodity but as a public necessity and right. His arguments could hardly be more timely as we enter the third decade of both the major social media platforms and of Wikipedia – the Enlightenment philosophes’ fantasy of what public enlightenment could become.” —Peter Baldwin, professor of history at UCLA, Global Distinguished Professor of History at NYU, co-founder of the Arcadia Fund, and author, The Copyright Wars: Three Centuries of Trans-Atlantic Battle
“Peter Kaufman’s erudite tour de force not only explains how the ‘information economy’ works to shape our world, it shows how battles over who and how information is controlled have been with us since the invention of the printing press. Better still, this wonderfully written, eminently readable book shows both how we are still fighting the same battles today—and how today’s battles are different. It lays out clearly why we need to restore control over the information economy and how open knowledge and open learning are keys to that effort.” —Larry Kramer, president of the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
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