Description
Book SynopsisJennifer Petersen constructs a genealogy of the legal conceptions of what counts as “speech” within free speech law, showing how changes in media technology influenced changing legal definitions of speech.
Trade Review“What does it mean for speech to be free? This rigorous, counterintuitive history reveals how changes in media technologies have transformed our answers to that question in the law and well beyond. As it shows, media technologies don’t just deliver speech; they model it. And when they do, they change the categories of thought and action through which we live our lives.” -- Fred Turner, author of * The Democratic Surround: Multimedia and American Liberalism from World War II to the Psychedelic Sixties *
“At the intersection of legal studies, cultural history, and media history, Jennifer Petersen’s book is a brilliant and groundbreaking study of the ways that modern First Amendment law has been shaped by judicial and cultural responses to the advent of new media technologies.” -- Samantha Barbas, Professor of Law, University at Buffalo School of Law
“[
How Machines Came to Speak] provides many discussion opportunities—and questions—for anyone interested in the intricacies of free speech theory. Petersen does not claim to resolve the debate but invites readers to ‘rethink some of our fundamental assumptions about speech.’ All readers will benefit from heeding her invitation. Recommended.” -- D. Caristi * Choice *
"The book not only deftly weaves together an analysis of legal texts but also considers the drafts of judgements as discursive repositories to help substantiate the technocultural context and historical debates that informed them. One of the most interesting . . . throughlines in the book is in the meta-research on communication theory and research and its in fluence over legal decisions at distinct points of her historiography." -- Vipulya Chari * H-Sci-Med-Tech, H-Net Reviews *
"
How Machines Came to Speak remains one of the most exciting and intellectually powerful books I have read in years, particularly in the fields of legal history and technology studies." -- Alex Sayl Cummings * Society for U.S. Intellectual History *
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments vii
Introduction. The “Speech” in Freedom of Speech 1
1. Moving Images and Early Twentieth-Century Public Opinion 24
2. “A Primitive but Effective Means of Conveying Ideas”: Gesture and Image as Speech 57
3. Transmitters, Relays, and Messages: Decentering the Speaker in Midcentury Speech Law 87
4. Speech without Speakers: How Speech Became Information 119
5. Speaking Machines: The Uncertain Subjects of Computer Communication 157
Conclusion. The Past and Future of Speech 190
Appendix on Methods 205
Notes 207
Bibliography 257
Index 271