1st Edition

Media Law Through Science Fiction Do Androids Dream of Electric Free Speech?

By Daxton R. Stewart Copyright 2019
    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    Attorney and legal scholar Daxton Stewart examines the intersection of media law and science fiction, exploring the past, present, and future of communication technology and policy debates.

    Science fiction offers a vast array of possibilities anticipating future communication technologies and their implications on human affairs. In this book, Stewart looks at potential legal challenges presented by plausible communication technologies that may arise 20 or 50 or 100 years from today. Performing what he calls "speculative legal research," Stewart identifies the kinds of topics we should be talking about relating to speech, privacy, surveillance, and more, and considers the debates that would be likely to arise if such technologies become a reality. Featuring interviews with prominent science fiction authors and legal scholars, and a foreword by Malka Older, this book considers the speculative solutions of science fiction and their implications in law and policy scholarship. Chapters feature specific literary examples to examine how cultural awareness and policy creation are informed by fictional technology, future societies, and legal disputes.

    Looking forward, beyond traditional legal research and scholarship to the possible and even very likely future of communication technology, this fascinating work of speculative legal research will give students and scholars of media law, science fiction, and technology much to discuss and debate.

    Foreword by Malka Older

    Preface

    1. Science Fiction, Technology, and Policy

    2. The Future of Copyright Law, Both Real and Virtual

    3. Privacy in the Perpetual Surveillance State

    4. Do Androids Dream of Electric Free Speech?

    5. Vanishing Speech and Destroying Works

    6. Law, the Universe, and Everything

    Biography

    Daxton R. "Chip" Stewart, Ph.D., J.D., LL.M., is a professor of Journalism in the Bob Schieffer College of Communication at Texas Christian University. He has more than 15 years of professional experience in news media and public relations and has been a licensed attorney since 1998. His recent scholarship has focused on the intersection of social media and the law, including the book Social Media and the Law (2nd ed., Routledge 2017).