Pop-up Maktivism: A Case Study of Organizational, Pharmaceutical, and Biohacker Narratives

abstract: The biohacker movement is an important and modern form of activism. This study broadly examines how positive-activist-oriented biohackers emerge, organize, and respond to social crises. Despite growing public awareness, few studies have examined biohacking's influence on prevailing no...

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Other Authors: Donovan, Matthew (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.53841
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-538412019-05-16T03:01:52Z Pop-up Maktivism: A Case Study of Organizational, Pharmaceutical, and Biohacker Narratives abstract: The biohacker movement is an important and modern form of activism. This study broadly examines how positive-activist-oriented biohackers emerge, organize, and respond to social crises. Despite growing public awareness, few studies have examined biohacking's influence on prevailing notions of organizing and medicine in-context. Therefore, this study examines biohacking in the context of the 2016 EpiPen price-gouging crisis, and explores how biohackers communicatively attempted to constitute counter-narratives and counter-logics about medical access and price through do-it-yourself (DIY) medical device alternatives. Discourse tracing and critical case study analysis are useful methodological frameworks for mapping the historical discursive and material logics that led to the EpiPen pricing crisis, including the medicalization of allergy, the advancement of drug-device combination technologies, and role of public health policy, and pharmaceutical marketing tactics. Findings suggest two new interpretations for how non-traditional forms of organizing facilitate new modes of resistance in times of institutional crisis. First, the study considers the concept of "pop-up maktivism" to conceptualize activism as a type of connective activity rather than collective organizing. Second, findings illustrate how activities such as participation and co-production can function as meaningful forms of institutional resistance within dominant discourses. This study proposes “mirrored materiality” to describe how biohackers deploy certain dominant logics to contest others. Lastly, implications for contributions to the conceptual frameworks of biopower, sociomateriality, and alternative organizing are discussed. Dissertation/Thesis Donovan, Matthew (Author) Tracy, Sarah J (Advisor) Nadesan, Majia H (Committee member) Kim, Heewon (Committee member) Halavais, Alexander (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Organization theory Public health Intellectual property Biohacking Medical Technology Medicine Organizational Communication Public Health Policy Resistance eng 194 pages Doctoral Dissertation Communication 2019 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.53841 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2019
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Organization theory
Public health
Intellectual property
Biohacking
Medical Technology
Medicine
Organizational Communication
Public Health Policy
Resistance
spellingShingle Organization theory
Public health
Intellectual property
Biohacking
Medical Technology
Medicine
Organizational Communication
Public Health Policy
Resistance
Pop-up Maktivism: A Case Study of Organizational, Pharmaceutical, and Biohacker Narratives
description abstract: The biohacker movement is an important and modern form of activism. This study broadly examines how positive-activist-oriented biohackers emerge, organize, and respond to social crises. Despite growing public awareness, few studies have examined biohacking's influence on prevailing notions of organizing and medicine in-context. Therefore, this study examines biohacking in the context of the 2016 EpiPen price-gouging crisis, and explores how biohackers communicatively attempted to constitute counter-narratives and counter-logics about medical access and price through do-it-yourself (DIY) medical device alternatives. Discourse tracing and critical case study analysis are useful methodological frameworks for mapping the historical discursive and material logics that led to the EpiPen pricing crisis, including the medicalization of allergy, the advancement of drug-device combination technologies, and role of public health policy, and pharmaceutical marketing tactics. Findings suggest two new interpretations for how non-traditional forms of organizing facilitate new modes of resistance in times of institutional crisis. First, the study considers the concept of "pop-up maktivism" to conceptualize activism as a type of connective activity rather than collective organizing. Second, findings illustrate how activities such as participation and co-production can function as meaningful forms of institutional resistance within dominant discourses. This study proposes “mirrored materiality” to describe how biohackers deploy certain dominant logics to contest others. Lastly, implications for contributions to the conceptual frameworks of biopower, sociomateriality, and alternative organizing are discussed. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Communication 2019
author2 Donovan, Matthew (Author)
author_facet Donovan, Matthew (Author)
title Pop-up Maktivism: A Case Study of Organizational, Pharmaceutical, and Biohacker Narratives
title_short Pop-up Maktivism: A Case Study of Organizational, Pharmaceutical, and Biohacker Narratives
title_full Pop-up Maktivism: A Case Study of Organizational, Pharmaceutical, and Biohacker Narratives
title_fullStr Pop-up Maktivism: A Case Study of Organizational, Pharmaceutical, and Biohacker Narratives
title_full_unstemmed Pop-up Maktivism: A Case Study of Organizational, Pharmaceutical, and Biohacker Narratives
title_sort pop-up maktivism: a case study of organizational, pharmaceutical, and biohacker narratives
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.53841
_version_ 1719184148191510528