Beyond Teamersterville

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    Jack Turner

    COMM 605

    Dr. HopsonMarch 5, 2009

    Beyond Teamsterville: Changing Places, Changing Minds

    Philipsens Places for Speaking in Teamsterville demonstrates that locations

    and spaces have symbolic meanings that encourage or suppress certain types of

    communication and relationships. For example, the street corner in Teamsterville

    provides a place for young men and adolescents to share language, values, cultural

    norms, and to negotiate identity. Discourse in this place preserves and maintains part of

    the culture of the Teamsterville neighborhood (2002).

    Phillipsen indicates that researchers can use a place as a heuristic location to

    discover and explore a communitys shared language, personal and group relationships,

    and cultural identity (2002). According to Cassell and Tversky, the heuristic location does

    not have to exist within physical boundaries, and they provide intriguing research that

    supports their claim. Cassell and Tversky theorize that interpersonal networks, social

    identity, a sense of belonging, and by extension a shared culture, can be constructed on

    the Internet (2006).

    This essay compares the signs of community and cultural development between

    Philipsens Teamsterville and a community constructed on the Internet. It describes

    recent research by Cassell and Tversky that demonstrates the salience of mostly textual

    communication in the construction of an online community (2002, 2006). An extension of

    cultural construction theory is discussed in which it is proposed that online communities

    can transcend into the real world through discourse. Further, the construction of a

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    culture of reconciliation developed cooperatively on the Internet between Palestinians

    and Israelis is proposed.

    Constructing Culture and Crossing Boundaries

    Can values and goals established in an online community extend beyond the

    Internet and converge with the physical, or real, world? The concept that discourse and

    language create and maintain communities and cultural values is used here to promote the

    idea that online cultural values might transcend the boundary between the virtual and

    real world. How important to community and culture are physical space, physical

    context, physical proximity, and non-verbal communication? In this regard, Cassell and

    Tversky have demonstrated that community and cultural construction can exist in an

    Internet group organized around common social goals, electronic social networks, and

    electronic communication (2006).

    Cassell and Tversky analyze a global community of international young adults

    called The Junior Summit that constructs a unique community and culture over a period

    of three months. Casell and Tversky show that participants self-construct their

    community by systematically establishing cultural norms, creating a common language,

    and fulfilling individuals needs for inclusion and respect. In a five year follow-up, they

    also show that relationships from the Internet community have extended into the daily

    lives of many participants (2006).

    Formation of Culture Online

    The Junior Summit took place in 1998 after thousands of applications for

    participation in the three-month project were processed from all over the world. About

    one thousand young people participated, mostly 14 to 16 year olds and fairly equal in

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    gender. The participants came from the cultures of North and South America, the

    Caribbean, Africa, and the Middle East. The purpose of the summit was to connect and

    empower motivated youth from all around the world to make their voices heard on issues

    concerning young people (Cassell and Tversky, 2006).

    The Junior Summit developed personal and working relationships through mostly

    online textual communication. Signs of community construction began to emerge within

    weeks. Cassell and Tversky say that participants used the pronoun I much less the more

    they worked and communicated together. Conversely, the pronoun we was used much

    more as the community established itself. A significant development was the change in

    the meaning of we. Participants at first used we in reference to their personal culture,

    but later they used it in reference to their online community (Cassell and Tversky, 2006).

    Similarities to Teamsterville

    Similar to Teamsterville youth, Junior Summit members expressed a great sense

    of support and a strong sense of identity connected to their online community.

    Participants described The Junior Summit as a big extended family, and a united

    global network of people all over the world. This strong sense of belonging was reported

    consistently by Junior Summit members (Cassell and Tversky, 2006).

    Both Junior Summit members and Teamsterville residents nurture, maintain,

    and protect their culture through discourse and established boundaries. Junior Summit

    members have established certain boundaries to protect their speaking and language, but

    they are not physical boundaries. They are areas of behavior, speaking topics, and

    language use that become boundaries which serve to define the Junior Summit

    community and culture (2006 Philipsen, 2002; Cassell and Tversky).

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    Beyond Teamsterville

    Self-selection is an important difference between Teamsterville and the Junior

    Summit community. Teamsterville community members are basically born into the

    community, or they are outsiders eventually accepted by the community. Self-selection is

    minimal, and social pressures against leaving the culture of the Teamsterville

    neighborhood are enormous (Cassell and Tversky, 2006; Philipsen, 2002).

    Junior Summit community members have been allowed a greater measure of free

    will in their selection of community and culture than residents of Teamsterville. All

    Junior Summit members are volunteers with a preconceived social goal, which is

    working together on youth-related international issues (Cassell and Tversky, 2006). The

    fact that they are initially bound together across many social, economic, and geographic

    boundaries by this commitment is a remarkable part of their community history. In this

    context, individual identities and personal goals may have superseded the participants

    original culture. Free will and self-selection may have provided focal points for a new

    cultural identification based on certain cross-culture similarities.

    Another unique feature of this online community is having an equal voice

    regardless of age, gender, heritage, and original culture. Equity in development of

    discourse content is also noted. Even though different communication channels may have

    existed within leadership roles and responsibilities, 84 percent of participants have stated

    that they always felt heard by the community. Interestingly, females have used more

    emotional language than males at the beginning of the project, but males have closed the

    gap by the end. Discourse about the future, a subject that has been associated with

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    older community members, is exhibited by younger community members by the end of

    the project (Cassell and Tversky, 2006).

    Transcending Boundaries

    The Junior Summit has demonstrated that places for speaking can transcend

    physical space. The emotional significance of a place exists in the minds and shared

    discourse of people who identify particular qualities to a place. That place can be where a

    confluence of shared values, beliefs, and goals is identified, supported, and maintained.

    This confluence can result in a constructed community that interconnects people from

    diverse backgrounds in a meaningful way.

    Results from Cassell and Tversky suggest that frequent dialogue among multi-

    cultural people in cyberspace can develop a place with a unique culture, language, and

    norms and values. A type of individual and cultural identity can arise from patterns of

    shared speech behavior, constructive relationships, perceived commonalities, and

    perceived boundaries. Through repetition of these patterns over time, a cultural history

    can be created (2006).

    Real Opportunities

    Assume that cultural values and identity are dependent on language and discourse.

    It follows that an online culture can translate itself into the real, physical world by way

    of shared discourse. If peaceful coexistence between members of formerly oppositional

    cultures can be constructed within a cyberspace community, it may be possible for this

    relationship to cross over into the real world.

    Some researchers are already testing online intercultural interactions to see if they

    have a significant effect in the real world. Stover has developed an online simulation

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    for negotiating conflicts in the Middle East available to anybody in the world who has

    access to the Internet. Participants must do a great deal of research and educate

    themselves on Middle Eastern history, culture, and current political situations. No data on

    real world influences from Stovers project are available at the time of this writing

    (Stover, 2008).

    Yablon and Katz used a combination of online communication and face-to-face

    talks to encourage empathy between Jewish and Arab Israeli students. Adult mentors with

    conflict resolution skills worked with the students and stressed societal values of

    understanding, equality, tolerance and peace. Concurrently, the students communicated

    interculturally through a daily online chat room. The results of the study indicated

    increased empathy between Jewish and Arab students (2001).

    The results of Yablon and Katzs study suggest that a higher purpose beyond

    cultural beliefs might be facilitated by the bonds of an online community. Such a higher

    purpose may be seen as a higher power dwelling within shared human bonds of

    understanding, trust, and fellowship. The power of these bonds becomes a natural force,

    its energy derived from the strength of the whole community. It is a higher power that can

    inspire the courage and tenacity needed for reconciliation.

    Conclusion

    Beyond Place As We Know It

    The significance of places for talking can be appreciated by changing the context

    of place. We can explore new regions of cultural communication and cultural

    construction by thinking of familiar places for talking, such as street corners and coffee

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    shops, as a starting point. We can, for example, explore the possibilities and opportunities

    for reconciling cultural hostilities in a peace community constructed on the Internet.

    In cyberspace, where physical, social, and cultural boundaries can be more easily

    transcended, it is possible to build a level playing field for all voices to be heard. For

    example, opportunities exist for Palestinians to speak with Israelis in a place that can

    encourage, and even to a degree enforce, open dialogue without the threat of physical

    violence. Repetition of regular communication in this arena might eventually construct a

    shared culture based on constructing a peaceful coexistence in the real world.

    Theoretically, a peace-building culture consisting of Palestinians and Israelis can

    be constructed on the Internet and translated into the physical domain. This process can

    be viewed as a contextual change that brings potential power to a message of

    reconciliation. This potential power might influence message acceptance by the most

    important participants in the peace process: Those who are anchored in the physical and

    emotional past, but are willing to open the border into a different future.

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    References

    Cassell, J, Tversky D (2006). The language of online intercultural community formation.

    Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication,10. 2, (January 2005).

    International Communication Association. Published Online: 23 Jun 2006.

    http://www3.interscience.wiley.com.mutex.gmu.edu/journal/120837937/issue.

    Retrieved February 16, 2009

    Philipsen, G. (2002). Places for speaking in teamsterville.Readings in Intercultural

    Communication: Experiences and Contexts 2ndEdition, Martin, J, Nakayama, T,

    Flores, L (Ed.), McGraw Hill, Boston. 192-202.

    Stover, William (2008). Information technology and international relations: Using online,

    interactive simulations to transcend time, space, and attitudes. Paper presented at

    the annual meeting of the APSA Teaching and Learning Conference, San Jose

    Marriott, San Jose, California, Feb 22, 2008 Online.