The Patent and the Malanggan

Theory, Culture and Society 18 (4):1-26 (2001)
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Abstract

How do we inhabit technology? This theme for a conference on the way in which technology at once surrounds us and becomes part of our very bodies prompts reflections from Melanesia. If the concept of technology inhabits anything, it most emphatically inhabits our ways of speaking about ourselves, reifying many different projects as the extensions of one - an enchantment with creativity. The same language imagines `nature' existing apart from human creations. It is clear that the life of these old Euro-American divisions is not over yet. Intellectual property protocols, notably patenting, foster the divide between `technology' and `nature' while presaging its collapse. This article points to some alternatives, incidentally offering a candidate for `habitation' that has nothing to do with community or locality.

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Citations of this work

An Apocalyptic Patent.Alain Pottage - 2020 - Law and Critique 31 (3):239-252.
Law after Anthropology: Object and Technique in Roman Law.Alain Pottage - 2014 - Theory, Culture and Society 31 (2-3):147-166.
Additive Technology and Material Cognition: A View from Anthropology.Susanne Küchler - 2014 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 14 (5):385-399.

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References found in this work

The body's career in anthropology.Thomas Csordas - 1999 - In Henrietta L. Moore (ed.), Anthropological Theory Today. Polity Press. pp. 172--205.
A Sense of Place.[author unknown] - 1987 - New Vico Studies 5:186-187.

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