Jones describes in her
article how poets gather on the social medium Twitter. By using retweets and
commenting on other poets’ work they post on picture they have created some
kind of community. On twitter unknown and known poets can meet and share opinions
and ideas about others work. The comments on a poet’s poem can be very useful
for them as feedback according to improve their work and develop and continuing
on their thoughts on a certain subject. The retweeting is also a good way for
poets to “get out there” so other poets and non-poets will become more familiar
with their work. Creating communities on social media, such as Twitter, can be
leading to great opportunities for such people as poets as an example. There
are some living proofs that the power of social media can recognize talents and
even lead to great job opportunities for some. This poet community on twitter is probably what
Harris would describe as a “discourse” community. According to Harris’ article “Discourse
community” is defined as such; “…the common space shared by its members is
replaced by a discursive "forum," and their one-to one interaction is
reduced to a system "providing information and feedback." And from
taking this definition word by word, this is what Jones describes in her
article.
NPR posted an article
about the power of the “hashtag”. In this article it describes how a discourse
community started by the creator of the hashtag #WhyIStayed. Within this
community people started to discuss abuse and divorce. The community of commentators
and “hashtaggers” raised this question and got other people interested in it
with help of the hashtag. This hashtag became a community for those people
interested in this topic. From my own experience I have seen these “hashtag
communities” raise and grow with my own eyes. On a smaller level, a wedding
hashtag that follows two people getting engaged and then married is an example
of a “hashtag community”.
Zammett Ruddy writes in
her article about how she took a picture of her kids making a snowman, but when
she was about to post the picture she realized that her picture was “fake” and showed
her kids smiling and being happy, the complete opposite that the kids had been
while building the snowman. The problem she writes about is probably something
many people out there face daily. I am one of them. Name any social media,
Instagram, twitter, Facebook, the majority of the users of these social medium
uses them to create an image of themselves, either for self-purposes or to “show
off”. I think this article is very interesting since I honestly catch myself
thinking the same thing daily as this mother; “should I post this picture that
looks absolutely great, and write about how great this event was even if in
real life it isn’t that great?” the author calls this “fakebooking” and I think
this is a very interesting term she chooses to use, and also a pretty correct
one. I think that fakebooking is a phenomenon in today’s social media based
world. I believe that many people have an obsession to be seen as “perfect” and
therefore post “perfect” pictures with “perfect” captions on their social media
accounts. The author is mostly discussing Facebook in this article, but from my
own experiences with social media I think that Instagram is probably the number
one medium where most people uses the term “fakebooking” daily. Instagram is
about the pictures and “pictures can speak a thousand words” as a Swedish
expression says. Instagram users take advantage of the photographing super
powers. An ordinary breakfast meal can suddenly look like “the most amazing and
fabulous meal ever”. More often Instagram users don’t even write a caption to
the pictures they are posting, just letting the picture speak. And this is when
the term of fakebooking is becoming even more certain.
I have personally
thought about for a long time how fun it would be to make a “behind the scenes”
account on Instagram which would only post pictures of other people taking a
picture they are uploading to Instagram. I think this would be a fun thing to
start, to recognize that the world isn’t perfect and there is always a “behind
the scenes” or “the reality” to show. I think starting up an account like this
might change people’s perceptions of what perfect is and that things doesn’t have
to be perfect all the time. Maybe, hopefully, people would stop pressuring
themselves to become so “perfect” in other people’s eyes.
As I mentioned in my
previous post, Harris talks about “interpretive communities” and “speech
communities”, I think that these two can be found in discourse communities as
well, not just in “the life outside the internet”. I think that discourse
communities evolve because of peoples obsession in belonging to something. And
probably people are looking to join both an interpretive community where they
share the same values and beliefs as the other people in the group, and a
speech community where they are grouped together with people that are at the
same place and time as themselves. An example of a “speech discourse community”
I am involved in is for an example “UNL international students community” on
facebook. Here I can find people that happen to go to UNL at the same time as
me and are international students as I am. I am also involved in an “interpretive
discourse community”, for an example my “BEST FRIENDS” private Facebook page,
where I feel connected to the people in that community because of our similar
values and beliefs.
To just sum this up I
do think that the majority of all the people out there in this world that has
some sort of societal connection and computer access are involved in many
different discourse communities, even if they aren’t aware of it themselves.
Ellen,I love your idea of an instagram account about instagram photos! How fun that would be! I think in some ways, by doing that, you'd be disrupting the existing discourse--the shared conventions of posting things to instagram. And in so doing, would crete a new discourse community--one that shares conventions and ways of making meaning in a new way (a way that sort of mocks the conventions of the old way).
ReplyDeleteAs you think about about interpative and speech communities, rahter than thinking of them as seporate all of theime, you might want to consder how they overlap.