Social media can be a very versatile thing, it
can be used as a to connect with people, it can be used to get your opinion out
there, it can also be a tool for promoting something (i.e. businesses, charities,
or your own work). For example Roxane Gay
tweeted a picture of the acknowledgments page of her novel and it opened her
novel up to new markets that would have been otherwise unavailable to her. She created
a community for herself by opening herself up to new readers, essentially she
created a community of fans and other people who appreciate her work on line.
Also the woman behind #WhyIStayed created a community of people who had been in
abusive relationships. I find this very touching that she got so many other
people to speak up because domestic violence is not a crime that is reported in
most instances, also it is not something the victims like to talk about; these
people all stepped forward, told their story, and hoped it would help someone
who was in the situation that they were in knowing people would look at them differently,
talk to them differently, gossip, about them, and treat them differently.
Tuesday, January 20, 2015
blog post 2
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JD, I'm fascinated by your point about changing your interactions and online community once you joined Twitter. I've heard others say simillar things about Twitter--that once they joined it, the limited the number of people they followed. So, what is it about Facebook that makes us widen our communities? Or what is it, do you think, about Twitter that makes us be more descerning about our communities?
ReplyDeleteYou mention that you have something in common with all the people you're in community with and the discourse you share reflects that. Are there any circumstances where you see the sharing of discourse actually creating a community? For exampe, the creation of the #WhyIStayed hashtag might be a case when these people iinitially had nothing in common beyond that one discursive act--the hashtag--to bring them together.