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Today’s Plan• Israel-Gaza conflict• Rooke
– gendered spaces– coding gender
• Marwick and boyd– motivations for using social media– imagined audience and context collapse
• BREAK• Fuchs
– group exercise about political blogging• ties in Marwick and boyd, Castells and Fuchs
• wrap up and what is coming next
TUESDAY NOVEMBER 20th18:00 - City Hall, Festival Control Board RoomWelcome & Speeches18:45 - Walk to Human Rights Monument19:00 - Human Rights Monument - Vigil
Following the vigil there will be a walk to Pink Triangle Services (PTS) at 331 Cooper St. for warming up, discussion and refreshments.
Gendered Space
How do we code binary gender into the design of online spaces?
How could we AVOID coding binary gender into the design of online
spaces?
“Users must be creative within the bounds of the code of social media.” (from Reading Assignment)
from Reading Assignment• “Projects on Facebook are difficult since the site is in
constant change, and if you were to make a community that was private, organizers of that Facebook page would have to continue to keep up with the privacy settings to ensure safety and a sense of comfort for its users.”
• “Twitter, with its hash tags would be difficult to use. If a person used a word and hash tagged it not realizing what it might do (i.e. invite unwanted harassment) the space is compromised.”
• “Safety for so many trans* individuals and youth especially is crucial (Rooke 2010, 662) and I just don’t think that it can be provided on sites like Twitter and Facebook.”
What motivates people to use social media?• Peer pressure; compare with others• Inclusion in online communities; finding new acquaintances with
shared interests• Staying in touch with distant relatives• Boredom/habit• Nosy• Egocentric; promote a business for capitalism• Agenda – for remembering things• Rant; state opinions• Procrastination• Gossip; nostalgia; stalking, creeping, twatching• Chat• Finding new information; relevant, up-to-date info; pick me up
(motivational quotes)• influence mainstream dmedia; creating/organizing events
Imagined Audience• “technology complicates our metaphors of
space and place” (115)• imagined audience vs. actual readers
– two different groups?
Context Collapse• “Twitter flattens
multiple audiences into one” (122)
• ‘nightmare reader’– “lowest common
denominator philosophy of sharing” (126)
FUCHS
• identify antagonisms: contradictory tendencies• consider dialectics: actuality/potentiality• no linear causes and effects more complex
– neither only opportunities nor only risks inherent in social phenomena but contradictory tendencies
• cooperative and participatory society– information and knowledge:
• free and accessible to all• produced for the benefit of all
– true network society: association of free and equal producers
Let’s become political bloggers!
• Step 1: with ONE partner, come up with a political issue that you both could (however slightly!) imagine pursuing as a theme for a co-authored blog [3 minutes MAX]
• Step 2: figure out who your imagined audience is and how you could use mass self-communication and horizontal networks to work towards raising awareness and/or achieving social change [10 minutes MAX]
• Step 3: apply Fuchs! [10 minutes MAX]a) First discuss the potentiality of your overarching goal.b) Then discuss the likely actuality.c) Consider why this gap exists.
Week Eleven: Privacy and Surveillance
• boyd, danah and Eszter Hargittai. 2010. “Facebook Privacy Settings: Who Cares?” First Monday 8(2).
• Fuchs, Christian. 2011. “An Alternative View of Privacy on Facebook.” Information 2:140 165.‐
• Cohen, Nicole S. and Leslie Regan Shade. 2008. “Gendering Facebook: Privacy and Commodification.” Feminist Media Studies 8(2):210-214.