Hacker and Troller as Trickster

If you read the literature on tricksters, you will confront a string of words that capture the moral quality and sensibilities of these figures, figures scattered across time and place and largely enshrined in myths and stories:


 

Cunning, deceit, lying, provocateur, mischief, audacious, thief, play, shrewdness, audacity, grotesque, over the top, appetite, shocking, fun, delight, wit, trap, subversive, ability, wanderer.

 


These figures, which include Coyote, Loki, Hermes, and Eshu, among many more, push the envelope of what is morally acceptable and in so doing, argues Lewis Hyde (in his tome on the subject), renew and revitalize culture, especially the moral stuff of culture. They are not only boundary crossers, they are boundary makers. As the title of his book so succinctly and masterfully broadcasts "Trickster Makes this World." Or as he suggests with a bit more elaboration:


I want to argue a paradox that the myth asserts: that the origins, liveliness, and durability of cultures require that there be a space for figures whose function is to uncover and disrupt the very things that cultures are based on. (p. 9)


At the opening of the book, Hyde asks whether there are tricksters in modern industrial societies. His answer is a plain 'no.' The con man who might share some similarities does not qualify. For in fact what is needed is either a polytheistic system "or lacking that, he needs at least a relationship to other powers, to people, to instructions, and traditions that can manage the odd double attitude of both insisting that boundaries be respected and recognizing that in the long run their liveliness depends on having those boundaries regularly distributed" p.13 He does locate the spirit of the trickster in spirited individuals: in Picasso, in Frederick Douglass, in laudable figures who push certain boundaries and renew our world for the better but nonetheless fall short of the archetypal trickster.


I bet it is pretty obvious where I am going with all of this given my object of study: phreakers, hackers, and trollers. The trickster does exist across America, across Europe, really across the world and it is not in myth but in embodied in group and living practice: in that of the prankster, hacker, the phreaker, the troller (all of whom, have their own unique elements of course, but so does each trickster). Their relationship to other powers are many and can be located in terms of information, intellectual property, the government, language itself, institutions of power like the FBI and AT&T. The list is not short.


For a few years now I have been thinking about the linkages between the trickster and hackers as well as the troller but it was only in the fall when I found myself trapped in a hospital for a week that I finally cracked open the book by Hyde and devoured it. Within a the first few pages, it was undeniable: there are many links to be made between the trickster and hacking. Many of these figures, push boundaries of all sorts: they upset ideas of propriety and property; they use their sharpened wits sometimes for play, sometimes for political ends; they get trapped by their cunning (which happens ALL the time with tricksters! That is how they learn); and they remake the world, technically, socially, and legally and includes software, licensing and even forms of literature (think textfile, the Jargon File or most dramatically, ED).


But if the trickster generally resides in myth, and the trickster of the information age resides in practice, myth matters everywhere because there is a mythos created around these figures. Sometimes the mythos is propagated these groups (take a look of ED for example or Phrack in the past) and of course the media has played an undeniable role. And yet, unlike what is represented in the pages of Hyde, there are living, actual bodies in motion, in conversation, in transformation, a group that goes far beyond the other more controlled and bounded tricksters we might be able to locate in society, such as artistic/political groups like the Yes Men.


But the most shocking (or hard to think through) element lies less in the many associations one can make, but in the following curious fact. For the most part the trickster is enshrined in myth and stories but the tricksters I am referring to are in fact full-bodied, full-blooded groups of people who are actually engaging in all sorts of acts of trickery. This is culture not in the sense of art and myth but people and practice and this of course makes an (ethical) difference. What happens when you are the recipient not of a story offered an elder, but the recipient of trickery, an act of pranking or trolling, for example? What happens when you can trace all sorts of instances of boundary re-shifting and remaking, as with the GPL? I think this, even more than the linkages, is what makes this connection so remarkable and I trying to think through what it means to have a figure that we can find and talk to, as opposed to one embodied in myth and story.


For now I am going to leave this post short and in the next installment, will start raising some of the connections between trickery and variants of hacking and trolling.


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6 Comments

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Great post! I read Hyde´s book in grad school and remember being quite taken with it. Although I have to say I always thought Frederick Douglass was a poor example of a modern trickster: the true black abolitionist trickster was clearly William Wells Brown, who navigated sentimentality, sensationalism, melodrama, panorama, public lecturing, political rhetoric, pantomime, and even wildcat banking with a far more anarchic and subterranean spirit than I think Douglass represents. Brown´s flagrant plagiarism in Clotel might even be considered a proto-form of cut´n´mix culture, hacking the sentimental abolitionist novel to produce an eclectic, diasporic, unpredictable text.
Anyway, I´m fascinated to read the next post, in particular your thoughts on how internet trolling might be linked to trickster culture.

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Terrific blog. I was thinking 4chan might be a great example of a modern day trickster.

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I don't remember any of Hyde's true tricksters being as violent or nihilistic or un-reparative as some trollers; although maybe some of the more extreme trollers only seem nihilistic or un-redeemable because it's not yet clear what the effects of their work will be. Another difference between real life and myth is, with myth you know the ending in advance. 

I wonder if Hyde privileges the way tricksters "make" the world at the expense of describing times when trickers' actions effected the regressive re-assertion of boundaries (laws, etc.). Although, that's a form of world-making too, just not redemptive in Hyde's sense. Again, the temporality of myth seems to matter; thinking, e.g., about how tricky protest has become as an effect of, e.g., tute bianche trickers or puppeteers, is too short-term a view. But maybe the reason Hyde can't find any trickers in industrial capitalism is that the reactions have been so powerful as to effect an erasure. Graeber confirms something like this in his essay on puppets, where he discusses police-media tactics as pre-emptive.

For an example from another discourse, here is one conference's semi-organized response to trollers--well, as far as I could tell, they were talking about trolls, although they were never named as such: 

http://www.law.uchicago.edu/node/1080

I write about this conf. in my troll chapter. There wasn't general agreement about what was to be done, but there was unanimous, presumptive agreement that the law was a, if not the remedy for trolls, whose more extreme, targeted actions they classified, legally, as "harm." Most of the lawyers in attendance meant to catch only the most violent, misogynist trollers, but the law is a blunt instrument. 

kris

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Kris: thanks for your engaging comments (not surprising given your dissertation topic which addresses this material). So in terms of whether the tricksters in Hyde are reclusive, nihilistic mother frikers.. When I first started reading the material, I was so struck at how out over the top these figures were: they murder, lie, steal, are driven, sometimes insatiably by appetite and then there there are all those phalli, like really long ones. So yea, the trickster figure is not exactly the type of guy (and yea, they are mostly guys… though I have met some pretty interesting female trollers lately who are ladies) that you want to bring home to your mom/dad.

But your point about myth reveals its ending while this world is contingent and open-ended is well put and challenges this connection. Further I am of course super concerned about being an apologist for this world and I am partly uncomfortable with this world but I would lie if I did not admit that I enjoy this stuff (and Butler here is instructive but more on that later).

And it is this ambivalence that so also captures the world of the trickster. You need a sense, as well, that what tricksters do is not all that good, that they transgress. In the myth, there are other gods and figures who provide the contrast (Apollo for Hermes) and perhaps it is us/we that are the Apollo force– that which designates this world as problematic (thinking out loud here)

Tavia: thanks for those references: those are much better picks than the ones Hyde reached for, which seemed to be made in passing.

In the past I have compared the stuff in Abraham's "Man of Words in the West Indies" to the smack talking that happens among geeks on Internet Relay Chat. The connection is more dubious than this one (I think) but it is a nice comparison to think through.

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Excellent piece, I've also considered the reflection of the Trickster archetype within institutional settings (my own work is on the military, but there has been some interesting work done on the "office clown"). I think perhaps the connection between the mythological Trickster and the "real" trickster is that the mythology is an expression of a basic human need for chaos within any structural environment. That might tar me too much as a cultural materialist, but so be it.

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Facebook and Google have made it hard to express yourself online in a way that cannot be linked back to your real identity.

Websites that strive for anonymity are partly a response to that - and an effort to recapture the spirit of freedom the internet maintained before governments got serious about controlling it.