Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revision Previous revision
Next revision
Previous revision
disruptive_entrepreneurship [2020/08/17 11:42]
nathanairplane [Phase two: Disrupted]
disruptive_entrepreneurship [2023/11/11 16:29] (current)
ntnsndr [Phase three: Disruptionism]
Line 3: Line 3:
 **MDST 2011** **MDST 2011**
  
-*Disruption* has become a hallowed achievement in contemporary business culture, to the point that we forget it used to be a bad thing. What, exactly, do entrepreneurs,​ investors, and internet ​evangelists mean by the word? What have been the great disruptions of our time, and who wound up disrupted?+*Disruption* has become a hallowed achievement in contemporary business culture. What, exactly, do entrepreneurs,​ investors, and Internet ​evangelists mean by the word? What have been the great disruptions of our time, and who wound up disrupted?
  
-This course is a hands-on exploration of disruptive media cultures, intended for entrepreneurs,​ critics, ​and activists alike. We will encounter disruptions in the world around us and devise some of our own. Students should expect to enlarge their entrepreneurial repertoires,​ but also to experience fresh trepidation about entrepreneurship's possible ​effects.+This course is a hands-on exploration of disruption as a practice ​and a theory, which goes to the heart of contemporary society. We will encounter disruptions in the world around us and devise some of our own. Students should expect to enlarge their entrepreneurial repertoires,​ but also to experience fresh trepidation about disruption's possible ​consequences.
  
  
Line 12: Line 12:
 Nathan Schneider ("​Nathan"​ or "​Professor Schneider"​)  ​ Nathan Schneider ("​Nathan"​ or "​Professor Schneider"​)  ​
 <​nathan.schneider@colorado.edu> ​   <​nathan.schneider@colorado.edu> ​  
-Office hours: Wednesday at 2-p.m., or by appointment ([[:​email_etiquette|via email]]) ​  +Armory Building, 1B24    
 +Office hours: Wednesday at 3-p.m., or by appointment ([[:​email_etiquette|via email]]) ​  
 Website: [nathanschneider.info](https://​nathanschneider.info) Website: [nathanschneider.info](https://​nathanschneider.info)
  
Line 19: Line 20:
  
 * Gain familiarity with discourses surrounding media entrepreneurship and disruptive innovation * Gain familiarity with discourses surrounding media entrepreneurship and disruptive innovation
-* Encounter the social impacts ​and enablers ​of economic disruptions+* Encounter the social impacts of economic disruptions
 * Cultivate habits of ethical entrepreneurship in media economies * Cultivate habits of ethical entrepreneurship in media economies
  
Line 25: Line 26:
 ## The business model ## The business model
  
-The course consists of six evaluated components; three are consecutive and three are ongoing.+The course consists of six evaluated components; three are consecutive ​"​phases" ​and three are ongoing.
  
 ### Phase one: Report ### Phase one: Report
 *20 percent* *20 percent*
  
-Early in the course, each student produces a brief, researched report on a past disruption. Write an internal memo by an employee of an incumbent organization as it comes to terms with the disruption taking place. Explain ​it clearly to colleagues and suggest possible responses that the incumbent ​organization might take. The report should be between 1,200 and 1,500 words, formatted and written appropriately (and creatively) in the guise of an official document from the organization. Evaluation criteria are as follows:+Early in the course, each student produces a brief, researched report on a past disruption. Write an internal memo by an employee of an incumbent organization as it comes to terms with a potentially threatening ​disruption taking place. Examples of incumbent organizations include large corporations,​ governance agencies, and cultural institutions. Explain ​the disruption ​clearly to colleagues and suggest possible responses that their organization might take. The report should be between 1,200 and 1,500 words, formatted and written appropriately (and creatively) in the guise of an official document from the organization. Evaluation criteria are as follows:
  
   * Completion of the assignment with clarity, stylistic correctness,​ and creativity   * Completion of the assignment with clarity, stylistic correctness,​ and creativity
   * Comprehension of the disruption and explanation of what qualifies it as disruptive   * Comprehension of the disruption and explanation of what qualifies it as disruptive
   * Evidence of self-directed research beyond assigned materials, including at least two peer-reviewed [[scholarly sources]] and relevant market data, using [[citation standards|appropriate citation]]   * Evidence of self-directed research beyond assigned materials, including at least two peer-reviewed [[scholarly sources]] and relevant market data, using [[citation standards|appropriate citation]]
-  * Meaningful engagement with at least two assigned ​materials ​from the course+  * Meaningful ​[[engagement ​with assigned sources|engagement]] ​with at least two assigned ​sources ​from the course
  
 ### Phase two: Presentation ### Phase two: Presentation
 *20 percent* *20 percent*
  
-The second project for the course is a presentation to the class about the effects ​of a disruptive innovation. ​Students ​should interview at least two people ​(outside the CU community) ​with direct experience of having their way of life or livelihood ​challenged ​by the disruption. In the presentation,​ students will share interviewees'​ insights, alongside an explanation of the nature of the disruption and its broader context. This assignment is conducted in pairs, who will present 10-to-12 minute presentations with slides. Students may form groups of three as well; these will required to present three interviews and three peer-reviewed sources, rather than the otherwise required two.+The second project for the course is a presentation to the class about the human impacts ​of a disruptive innovation. ​Each student ​should interview at least one person ​(outside the CU community) ​whose way of life or livelihood ​has been threatened ​by the disruption. In the presentation,​ students will share interviewees'​ insights, alongside an explanation of the nature of the disruption and its broader context. This assignment is conducted in groups of 3-4, who will present 10-minute presentations with slides.
  
 Each presentation should cover a unique topic. Evaluation criteria are as follows: Each presentation should cover a unique topic. Evaluation criteria are as follows:
  
   * Completion of the assignment with clarity, stylistic correctness,​ and creativity   * Completion of the assignment with clarity, stylistic correctness,​ and creativity
-  * Comprehension of the disruption and explanation of what qualifies it as disruptive +  * Comprehension of the disruption, including its history, market dynamics, ​and what qualifies it as disruptive 
-  * Evidence of self-directed research beyond assigned materialsincluding at least two peer-reviewed ​[[academic ​sources]], and [[citation standards|appropriate citation]] +  * Insightful interviews in disrupted communities by each student (duly credited)along with contextual data on social impacts 
-  * Meaningful engagement ​with at least one assigned ​material ​from the course+  * Meaningful ​[[engagement with assigned ​sources|engagement]] with at least two assigned ​sources ​from the course
  
 ### Phase three: Whitepaper ### Phase three: Whitepaper
-*20 percent*+*25 percent*
  
-At the conclusion of the course, students produce a [[whitepaper]] outlining an original proposal for a disruption involving networked digital media. In between 1,500 and 1,800 words, describe the nature of the disruption, its economic and technological context, and the means of its financing and growth. Be sure to also consider its potential social effects.+At the conclusion of the course, students produce a [[whitepaper]] outlining an original proposal for a disruption involving networked digital media. It can advance business, social, or policy goals. In between 1,500 and 1,800 words, describe the nature of the disruption, its economic and technological context, and the means of its financing and growth. Be sure to also consider its potential social effects.
  
-Students will twice present their ideas to the class---first as a one-minute practice run for feedback and, second, as a two-minute pitch with one parsimonious slide.+Students will twice present their ideas to the class---first as a one-minute practice run for feedback and, second, as a one-minute pitch with one parsimonious slide.
  
 Evaluation criteria are as follows: Evaluation criteria are as follows:
  
-  * Completion of the assignment with clarity, stylistic correctness,​ and creativity, including an in-class pitch during the final week+  * Completion of the assignment with clarity, stylistic correctness,​ and creativity
   * Comprehension of the disruption and explanation of what qualifies it as disruptive   * Comprehension of the disruption and explanation of what qualifies it as disruptive
-  * Evidence of self-directed research beyond assigned materials, including at least two peer-reviewed [[academic ​sources]] and relevant market data, using [[citation ​standards|appropriate citation]] +  * Evidence of self-directed research beyond assigned materials, including at least two peer-reviewed [[scholarly ​sources]] and relevant market data, using APA citation 
-  * Meaningful engagement with at least two assigned ​materials ​from the course+  * Meaningful ​[[engagement ​with assigned sources|engagement]] ​with at least two assigned ​sources ​from the courses 
 +  * Clear, compelling in-class pitch with an elegant slide
  
-### Class participation+### Quizzes
 *15 percent* *15 percent*
  
-All students should contribute to class discussions as active listeners, question-askers,​ commentators, ​and critics. Respectful disagreement with the instructor and fellow students is welcome and encouraged. Students ​will also pitch their own disruptive ideas to the class. ​Attendance will not be taken formallybut meaningful participation is not compatible with absenceBe prepared to discuss each week's assigned materials by the start of that week's first meeting.+Quizzes based on readings ​and lectures ​will occur at random intervals during ​class using CanvasQuizzes are meant to be taken individuallyin class, without referencing external materialsDeviating from these norms will be regarded as a violation of the campus Honor Code.
  
-Evaluation takes place at the midterm and the end of the course, with each evaluation period weighted equally. Evaluation is based on the following: 
  
-  * Comments and questions that advance the conversation,​ with evidence of listening to others and engagement with assigned materials +### Class participation 
-  * In-class pitch exercises +*10 percent*
-  * Flash quizzes at random intervals +
- +
- +
-### Annotation +
-*15 percent*+
  
-Each week, students should ​engage ​with the assigned materials by using the [[Hypothesis]] annotation platform, where technically possibleBoth quality and quantity ​will be taken into accountAnnotations for each week's assigned materials ​are due by the start of that week's first meeting. Evaluation takes place at the midterm and the end of the course, with each evaluation period weighted equally.+All students should ​contribute to class discussions as active listeners, question-askers,​ commentators,​ and critics. Respectful disagreement ​with the instructor and fellow students is welcome and encouragedAttendance ​will not be taken formally, but meaningful participation is not compatible with absenceBe prepared to discuss ​each week's assigned materials by the start of that week's first meeting.
  
-It may not be necessary to read every assigned word with equal care. Expect to read effectively but strategically. Evaluation ​criteria are as follows:+Evaluation takes place at the midterm and the end of the course, ​with each evaluation period weighted equally. Evaluation ​is based on:
  
-  ​Volume of annotations ​and distribution throughout assigned materials; annotate every (annotatable) reading at least once and go deep on at least one of the readings each week +Contributing comments ​and questions that advance ​the conversation 
-  * Evidence of reflection and insight +* Evidence of listening to others 
-  * Engagement with fellow students'​ annotations+[[engagement with assigned sources|Engagement]] with assigned materials
  
 ### Entrepreneurial events ### Entrepreneurial events
 *10 percent* *10 percent*
  
-Part of the course is participation in two synchronous events in CU's and Boulder'​s ​entrepreneurial community. ​Before the end of the day after each event, submit a discussion post in Canvas about your experience there. With this, include proof of participation (such as a photo of yourself there or of you and your screen). Evaluation criteria are as follows:+Part of the course is participation in two synchronous events in the Boulder entrepreneurial community---at least one on campusWithin 24 hours after each event, submit a discussion post in Canvas about your experience there. With this, include proof of participation (such as a photo of yourself there or of you and your screen). Evaluation criteria are as follows: 
 + 
 +  * Compelling proof of attendance at the event 
 +  * Insightful, 300-500 word reflection on an aspect of each event 
 +  * [[engagement with assigned sources|Engagement]] with at least one of the assigned materials in each analysis 
 + 
 +Entrepreneurship-related events can be found at the campus [Innovation & Entrepreneurship Initiative website](https://​www.colorado.edu/​innovate/​events),​ [Silicon Flatirons](https://​siliconflatirons.org/​events/​),​ and [Meetup](https://​www.meetup.com/​cities/​us/​co/​boulder/​events/​).
  
-  * Compelling proof of attendance at: 
-      - The [Innovation & Entrepreneurship Fall Kickoff](https://​www.colorado.edu/​innovate/​events) on September 23 
-      - A second event, on or off campus, of your choosing 
-  * Insightful, 300-500 word analysis of an aspect of each event 
-  * Engagement with at least one of the assigned materials in each analysis 
  
-Entrepreneurship-related events can be found at the campus [Innovation & Entrepreneurship Initiative website](https://​www.colorado.edu/​innovate/​events),​ [Silicon Flatirons](https://​siliconflatirons.org/​events/​),​ [Startup Digest](https://​www.startupdigest.com/​digests/​boulder-denver),​ and [Meetup](https://​www.meetup.com/​cities/​us/​co/​boulder/​events/​). 
  
 ### Grading ### Grading
 +
 +Grading will follow the expectations stated in this syllabus.
 +
 +If you need an extension on any assignment, consult your instructor ahead of time. Late projects will be penalized 5 percentage points per day.
 +
 +Plagiarism and similar lapses in [[academic honesty]] can result in no credit for the assignment and referral to campus authorities. ​
  
 Based on the stated percentage structure, grades will be awarded as follows: A (94-100), A- (90-93), B+ (87-89), B (83-86), B- (80-82), C+ (77-79), C (73-76), C- (70-72), D+ (67-69), D (63-66), D- (60-62), F (0-59). The minimum passing grade is 60 for undergraduates and 70 for graduate students. Based on the stated percentage structure, grades will be awarded as follows: A (94-100), A- (90-93), B+ (87-89), B (83-86), B- (80-82), C+ (77-79), C (73-76), C- (70-72), D+ (67-69), D (63-66), D- (60-62), F (0-59). The minimum passing grade is 60 for undergraduates and 70 for graduate students.
Line 108: Line 110:
  
 * Work together to foster a respectful, mature, convivial community based on mutual learning, diverse perspectives,​ and accommodation * Work together to foster a respectful, mature, convivial community based on mutual learning, diverse perspectives,​ and accommodation
-* Adhere to all [[university policies]] regarding academic integrity, accessibility,​ behavior, discrimination,​ misconduct, and religious observances;​ we take responsibility for understanding them and the relevant procedures+* Adhere to all [[university policies]] regarding academic integrity, accessibility,​ behavior, discrimination,​ misconduct, inclusivity, and religious observances;​ we take responsibility for understanding them and the relevant procedures
 * Respect student privacy, keeping any materials or statements shared in class confidential unless permission is granted to do otherwise * Respect student privacy, keeping any materials or statements shared in class confidential unless permission is granted to do otherwise
-* Be present in our online ​interactions,​ keeping ​cameras on and attention on each other+* Be present in our interactions ​together, keeping ​programs, tabs, and notifications unrelated to class off during meetings
  
 If you find yourself in a position where lack of access to food, housing, health care, or other basic necessities interferes with your studies, consider seeking support from the [Dean of Students](https://​www.colorado.edu/​studentaffairs/​deanofstudents) and, if you feel comfortable doing so, your instructor. We will work to assist you however we can. If you find yourself in a position where lack of access to food, housing, health care, or other basic necessities interferes with your studies, consider seeking support from the [Dean of Students](https://​www.colorado.edu/​studentaffairs/​deanofstudents) and, if you feel comfortable doing so, your instructor. We will work to assist you however we can.
  
-### Fall 2020 calendar 
  
-Due dates are at 2 p.m.:+## Topics
  
-* Select Phase One report topic (Canvas discussion):​ 9/15 +The course topics, like the assignments,​ proceed in three phases. First, we acquaint ourselves with some processes ​and ideologies associated with Silicon Valley-style entrepreneurial culture and discourses of disruption. Second, we consider the human impacts of disruptive change. Third, we explore a variety of strategies and shortcomings of disruptive and entrepreneurial thinking.
-* Phase One report (Canvas dropbox): 10/1 +
-* Select Phase Two presentation topic and date (shared document): 9/22 +
-* Innovation & Entrepreneurship Fall Kickoff (due at midnight): 9/23  +
-* Midterm participation evaluations:​ 10/13 +
-* Phase Two presentations (Canvas dropbox): Various dates +
-* Phase Three pitch practice: 11/19 +
-* Phase Three pitch presentation:​ 12/3 +
-* Phase Three whitepaper (Canvas dropbox): 12/3 +
- +
-## Topics+
  
-The course topics, like the assignments,​ proceed ​in three phases. Firstwe acquaint ourselves with some processes and ideologies associated with Silicon Valley-style entrepreneurial culture and discourses of disruptionSecond, we consider ​the human impacts of disruptive change. Third, we step back and explore some broader social, philosophical,​ and political consequences of disruptive thinking.+Except for the book we read in Phase Twoall readings should be available onlineSome readings require using the university network (either on campus or via VPN).
  
 ### Phase one: Disruption ### Phase one: Disruption
Line 136: Line 127:
 What does this overused word even mean? What does this overused word even mean?
  
-#### 1. A mindset+#### 1. Startup communities
  
-* In Michelle Ferrier and Elizabeth Mays (eds.), _[Media Innovation and Entrepreneurship](https://​press.rebus.community/​media-innovation-and-entrepreneurship/​)_ (Rebus Community, 2017--2019):​ "​Developing the Entrepreneurial Mindset,"​ "​Pitching Ideas" 
 * Brad Feld, {{:​lib:​feld-startup_communities-excerpt.pdf|chapters 1-3}} in _Startup Communities:​ Building an Entrepreneurial Ecosystem in Your City_ (Wiley, 2012) * Brad Feld, {{:​lib:​feld-startup_communities-excerpt.pdf|chapters 1-3}} in _Startup Communities:​ Building an Entrepreneurial Ecosystem in Your City_ (Wiley, 2012)
-Conner Forrest, "[Startup Jargon: 10 Terms to Stop Using](https://www.techrepublic.com/article/startup-jargon-10-terms-to-stop-using/​)," ​_TechRepublic_ ​(May 1, 2014)+Xiaowei R. Wang, "[Letter from Shenzhen](https://logicmag.io/scale/letter-from-shenzhen/​)," ​_Logic(s)_ ​(April 1, 2018)
  
 #### 2. Theory and cliché #### 2. Theory and cliché
  
-Joseph L. Bower and Clayton M. Christensen, ​"[Disruptive ​Technologies:​ Catching the Wave](https://www.academia.edu/download/59516552/disruptive_technologies20190604-89196-pd4gyy.pdf)," ​_Harvard Business Review_ (January-February 1995) +* Clayton M. Christensen, ​Michael E. Raynor, and Rory McDonald, “[What Is Disruptive ​Innovation?](https://hbr.org/2015/12/what-is-disruptive-innovation),” _Harvard Business Review_ (December 12015)
-* Clayton M. Christensen and Michael Overdorf"​[Meeting the Challenge of Disruptive Change](http://​innovbfa.viabloga.com/​files/​HBR___Christensen___meeting_the_challenge_of_disruptive_change___2009.pdf),"​ _Harvard Business Review_ (March-April 2000)+
 * Jill Lepore, "[The Disruption Machine](http://​www.newyorker.com/​magazine/​2014/​06/​23/​the-disruption-machine),"​ _New Yorker_ (June 23, 2014) * Jill Lepore, "[The Disruption Machine](http://​www.newyorker.com/​magazine/​2014/​06/​23/​the-disruption-machine),"​ _New Yorker_ (June 23, 2014)
 +* Drake Bennett, "​{{:​lib:​christensen-bloomberg.pdf|Clayton Christensen Responds to New Yorker Takedown of '​Disruptive Innovation'​}},"​ _Bloomberg_ (June 21, 2014)
  
 #### 3. Organizational vessels #### 3. Organizational vessels
  
 +* Venkatesh Rao, "[A Brief History of the Corporation:​ 1600 to 2100](https://​www.ribbonfarm.com/​2011/​06/​08/​a-brief-history-of-the-corporation-1600-to-2100/​),"​ _Ribbonfarm_ (June 8, 2011)
 * Jessica Livingston, "[Grow the Puzzle Around You](http://​foundersatwork.posthaven.com/​grow-the-puzzle-around-you),"​ _Posthaven_ (June 30, 2018) * Jessica Livingston, "[Grow the Puzzle Around You](http://​foundersatwork.posthaven.com/​grow-the-puzzle-around-you),"​ _Posthaven_ (June 30, 2018)
-* Steve Blank, "[Why the Lean Start-Up Changes Everything](https://​hbr.org/​2013/​05/​why-the-lean-start-up-changes-everything),"​ _Harvard Business Review_ (May 2013) 
-* In Michelle Ferrier and Elizabeth Mays (eds.), _[Media Innovation and Entrepreneurship](https://​press.rebus.community/​media-innovation-and-entrepreneurship/​)_ (Rebus Community, 2017--2019):​ "​Nonprofit Model Development"​ 
  
 #### 4. Raising rounds #### 4. Raising rounds
  
-* Kim-Mai Cutler, "[The Unicorn Hunters](https://​logicmag.io/​04-the-unicorn-hunters/​)," ​_Logic_ ​no. 4 (2018)+* Kim-Mai Cutler, "[The Unicorn Hunters](https://​logicmag.io/​04-the-unicorn-hunters/​)," ​_Logic(s)_ ​no. 4 (2018)
 * Paul Graham, "​[Startup = Growth](http://​www.paulgraham.com/​growth.html)"​ (September 2012) * Paul Graham, "​[Startup = Growth](http://​www.paulgraham.com/​growth.html)"​ (September 2012)
-Jennifer Brandel, Mara Zepeda, Astrid Scholz, and Aniyia Williams, "[Zebras Fix What Unicorns Break](https://​medium.com/​@sexandstartups/zebrasfix-c467e55f9d96)" (March 82017)+Daisy Onubogu, "[Underrepresented Founders are Merely Collateral Damage](https://​medium.com/​zebras-unite/underrepresented-founders-are-merely-collateral-damage-cae17f6d3379)" (February 252021)
  
-#### 5. Origin stories+#### 5. Endgames 
 + 
 +* Peter Thiel with Blake Masters, _[Zero to One: Notes on Startups, or How to Build the Future](https://​libcat.colorado.edu/​Record/​b11042512)_,​ chapters 4-5 (Crown Currency, 2014) 
 +* Cory Doctorow, "​[Tiktok'​s Enshittification](https://​pluralistic.net/​2023/​01/​21/​potemkin-ai/#​hey-guys),"​ _Pluralistic_ (January 21, 2023) 
 +* Constance Grady, "[How Does Elon Musk Get Away with It All?​](https://​www.vox.com/​culture/​23833377/​elon-musk-image-analysis-acts-of-love-talulah-riley)"​ _Vox_ (Aug 17, 2023) 
 + 
 +#### 6. Capitalism, all along
  
 * Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, [preamble and chapter 1](https://​www.marxists.org/​archive/​marx/​works/​1848/​communist-manifesto/​ch01.htm),​ _Manifesto of the Communist Party_ (1848) * Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, [preamble and chapter 1](https://​www.marxists.org/​archive/​marx/​works/​1848/​communist-manifesto/​ch01.htm),​ _Manifesto of the Communist Party_ (1848)
 * Joseph A. Schumpeter, "[The Creative Response in Economic History](https://​www.jstor.org/​stable/​pdf/​2113338.pdf),"​ _Journal of Economic History_ 7, no. 2 (November 1947) * Joseph A. Schumpeter, "[The Creative Response in Economic History](https://​www.jstor.org/​stable/​pdf/​2113338.pdf),"​ _Journal of Economic History_ 7, no. 2 (November 1947)
-* John E. Elliott, "[Marx and Schumpeter on Capitalism'​s Creative Destruction:​ A Comparative Restatement](https://​www.jstor.org/​stable/​1885348),"​ _The Quarterly Journal of Economics_ 95, no. 1 (August 1980) 
- 
  
 ### Phase two: Disrupted ### Phase two: Disrupted
  
-This year, phase two will center ​around the context ​of disruption by plague+Phase two centers ​around ​how one company, Amazon, has disrupted US society, through ​the lens of one book, available in the bookstore:
  
-#### 6. The mother of the modern+* Alec MacGillis, _Fulfillment:​ Winning and Losing in One-Click America_ (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2021)
  
-* Carrie Arnold, "[The Viruses That Made Us Human](https://​www.pbs.org/​wgbh/​nova/​article/​endogenous-retroviruses/​),"​ _NOVA_ (September 28, 2016) +#### 7. The basement to security
-* Silvia Federici, "[All the World Needs a Jolt](https://​anarchivists.gitbooks.io/​caliban/​content/​jolt.html),"​ in _Caliban and the Witch: Women, the Body, and Primitive Accumulation_ (Autonomedia,​ 2014) +
-* Charles C. Mann, "[Why Billington Survived](https://​search-ebscohost-com.colorado.idm.oclc.org/​login.aspx?​direct=true&​db=nlebk&​AN=719025&​site=ehost-live&​scope=site&​ebv=EK&​ppid=Page-__-35),"​ in _1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus_ (Vintage, 2006)+
  
-#### 7What time is it on the clock of the world?+* MacGillis, _Fulfillment_,​ "​Introduction"​ to ch3
  
-* Venkatesh Rao, "​[Pandemic Time: A Distributed Doomsday Clock](https://​www.noemamag.com/​pandemic-time-a-distributed-doomsday-clock/​),"​ _Noema_ (June 8, 2020) +#### 8. Dignity to power
-* Gene Demby, "[Why Now, White People](https://​www.npr.org/​2020/​06/​16/​878963732/​why-now-white-people),"​ _Code Switch_ podcast (June 16, 2020) +
-* Helen Rosner, "[The Case for Letting the Restaurant Industry Die](https://​www.newyorker.com/​culture/​annals-of-gastronomy/​the-case-for-letting-the-restaurant-industry-die),"​ _New Yorker_ (May 22, 2020)+
  
-#### 8Crisis as opportunity+* MacGillis, _Fulfillment_,​ ch4 to ch. 6
  
-* Kevin Sneader and Bob Sternfels, "[From Surviving to Thriving: Reimagining the Post-COVID-19 Return](https://​www.mckinsey.com/​featured-insights/​future-of-work/​from-surviving-to-thriving-reimagining-the-post-covid-19-return),​ McKinsey & Company (May 1, 2020) +#### 9. Shelter ​to overtime
-* Marc Andreessen, "​[It'​s Time to Build](https://​a16z.com/​2020/​04/​18/​its-time-to-build/​),"​ Andreesen Horowitz blog (April 18, 2020) +
-* Shanley Kane, "​[People Are Dying, Marc. Stick Your Flying Cars Up Your Ass](https://​modelviewculture.com/​news/​people-are-dying-marc-stick-your-flying-cars-up-your-ass),"​ _Model View Culture_ (April 21, 2020) +
- +
-#### 9. Disaster entrepreneurship +
- +
-* From Rebecca Solnit, "​[Prelude:​ Falling Together](http://​lithub.com/​rebecca-solnit-how-to-survive-a-disaster/​),"​ _A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities That Arise in Disaster_ (Viking, 2009) +
-* Naomi Klein, "[How Power Profits from Disaster](https://​www.theguardian.com/​us-news/​2017/​jul/​06/​naomi-klein-how-power-profits-from-disaster),"​ _Guardian_ (July 6, 2017) +
-* Kaitlyn Tiffany, "​[Pandemic Organizers Are Co-opting Productivity Software](https://​www.theatlantic.com/​technology/​archive/​2020/​05/​coronavirus-mutual-aid-groups-slack-airtable-google/​612190/​),"​ _Atlantic_ (May 28, 2020)+
  
 +* MacGillis, _Fulfillment_,​ ch. 7 to "​Overtime"​
  
 ### Phase three: Disruptionism ### Phase three: Disruptionism
Line 200: Line 182:
 What, then, can we do? What, then, can we do?
  
-#### 10. Refusal+#### 10. Disrupting work
  
-* _[The Salt of the Earth](https://www.youtube.com/watch?​v=i9oY4rmDaWw)_, directed by Herbert J. Biberman ​(1954+Ben Tarnoff, ​_[The Making ​of the Tech Worker Movement](https://logicmag.io/​the-making-of-the-tech-worker-movement/​full-text/)_ (Logic(s), 2020
-Noam Scheiber ​and Kate Conger, "[The Great Google Revolt](https://www.nytimes.com/​interactive/​2020/​02/​18/​magazine/​google-revolt.html), _New York Times Magazine_ (February 18, 2020) +Anisia Uzeyman ​and Saul Williams ​(dirs.), _[Neptune Frost](https://colorado.kanopy.com/node/12574154)(2021)
-* "[Tips on Unionizing Your Tech Workforce](https://modelviewculture.com/pieces/tips-on-unionizing-your-tech-workforce)," _Model View Culture_ ​(April 30, 2020)+
  
-#### 11. Design thinking+#### 11. Disrupting capital
  
-* "[Design, Meanings, and Radical Innovation: A Metamodel and a Research Agenda](https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/j.1540-5885.2008.00313.x)," ​_Journal of Product Innovation Management_ 25, no. (September 2008+Richard Barbrook and Andy Cameron, ​"[The Californian Ideology](https://monoskop.org/images/d/dc/Barbrook_Richard_Cameron_Andy_1996_The_Californian_Ideology.pdf)," ​_Science as Culture_ 6, no. (1996
-Tim Brown and Jocelyn Wyatt, "[Design Thinking for Social Innovation](https://elibrary.worldbank.org/doi/pdf/​10.1596/​1020-797X_12_1_29)," ​_Development Outreach_ ​(July 2010) +Jennifer Brandel, Mara Zepeda, Astrid Scholz, ​and Aniyia Williams, "[Zebras Fix What Unicorns Break](https://medium.com/@sexandstartups/zebrasfix-c467e55f9d96)" (March 82017)
-* Sasha Costanza-Chock (ed.)_[Design Justice for Action](https://​designjustice.org/​s/​DJ_2017_Issue3.pdf)_,​ Design Justice Zines \#3 (n.d.)+
  
-#### 12. Decentralize everything+#### 12. Disruptive citizenship
  
-Tim Berners-Lee, "[Information Management: A Proposal](https://​www.w3.org/History/1989/proposal.html) (March 1989, May 1990+Maria Mazzucato, "[The Entrepreneurial State](https://​www.proquest.com/docview/912870584/fulltextPDF/​86FE0FED4208456EPQ/​1?​accountid=14503)," _Soundings_ 49 (Winter 2011
-Manoush Zomorodi and Jen Poyant, "[Blockchain. Block What?!](https://zigzagpod.com/2018/06/​13/​episode-2/​)," ​_ZigZag_ (June 13, 2018) +Malka Older, "[Temporary Organizations in Disaster Response: Crisis, Temporality,​ and Governance](https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/00027642221144847)," ​_American Behavioral Scientist_ ​(2022)
-* Malene Alleyne, Camille Canon, Amelia Evans, Yichen Feng, Nathan Schneider, and Mara Zepeda, _Exit to Community: A Community Primer_ ​(2020)+
  
-#### 13. The new citizen+#### 13. Disrupting time
  
-Zeynep Tufekci, "[How Social Media Took Us from Tahrir Square ​to Donald Trump](https://​www.technologyreview.com/s/611806/​how-social-media-took-us-from-tahrir-square-to-donald-trump/​)," ​_MIT Technology Review_ ​(August 142018+Niles Eldredge and Stephen Jay Gould, "[Punctuated Equilibria: An Alternative ​to Phyletic Gradualism](https://​www.blackwellpublishing.com/ridley/classictexts/eldredge.pdf)," ​in Schopf, T.J.M. ​(ed.)_Models in Paleobiology_ (Freeman Cooper, 1972
-Andrew Leonard, "[How Taiwan’s Unlikely Digital Minister Hacked the Pandemic](https://www.wired.com/story/how-taiwans-unlikely-digital-minister-hacked-the-pandemic/​)," ​_Wired_ (July 232020) +Walidah Imarisha, "[All Organizing Is Science Fiction](https://archive.org/details/podcast_umass-amherst-history-departme_walidah-imarisha-all-organiz_1000423858347)," ​History DepartmentUniversity ​of Massachusetts Amherst ​(November 132018)
-* Lilly Irani, "​[Hackathons and the Making ​of Entrepreneurial Citizenship](https://​escholarship.org/​uc/​item/​33q5t84v)," _Science, Technology & Human Values_ 40, no. 5 (2015)+
  
-#### 14. Maintenance+#### 14. Disruption Fantasies
  
-* David Edgerton, "​Introduction," "​Maintenance," and "​Innovation" in _[The Shock of the Old: Technology and Global History Since 1900](http://​www.wtf.tw/​ref/​edgerton.pdf)_ (Profile Books, 2008)+* David Edgerton, "​Introduction" ​and "​Maintenance"​ in _[The Shock of the Old: Technology and Global History Since 1900](http://​www.wtf.tw/​ref/​edgerton.pdf)_ (Profile Books, 2008
 +* Stefano Harney and Fred Moten, "​Fantasy in the Hold" (pp. 84-99), _[The Undercommons:​ Fugitive Planning & Black Study](https://​www.minorcompositions.info/​wp-content/​uploads/​2013/​04/​undercommons-web.pdf)_ (Minor Compositions,​ 2013)
  
 ### Further resources ### Further resources
  
-  ​* _[How I Built This with Guy Raz](https://​www.npr.org/​podcasts/​510313/​how-i-built-this)_,​ NPR podcast +* _[How I Built This with Guy Raz](https://​www.npr.org/​podcasts/​510313/​how-i-built-this)_,​ NPR podcast 
-  * [Tech Workers Coalition newsletter](https://​news.techworkerscoalition.org/​) +* [Resources](https://​www.theselc.org/​resources),​ Sustainable Economies Law Center 
-  Y Combinator, ​[Startup School library](https://​www.startupschool.org/​library)+* [Tech Workers Coalition newsletter](https://​news.techworkerscoalition.org/​) 
 +* [Startup School library](https://​www.startupschool.org/​library), Y Combinator 
 + 
 + 
 +----
  
---- 
  
 [ [[note:​disruptive_entrepreneurship|Notes]] ] [ [[note:​disruptive_entrepreneurship|Notes]] ]