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Communities, networks, individuals : place, self and everyday life on the internet

conference contribution
posted on 2012-01-01, 00:00 authored by Matthew Allen
In this paper, I review the long-established use of the concept of ‘community’ which attempts both to perceive and analyse the experience of human interaction, mediated by networked computing. Ever since this form of communication commenced, it was clear that it was no ‘bloodless technological ritual’ (Rheingold, 1994), but something much more deeply human and expressive. For many years, the conceptual apparatus of ‘community’ served as the primary means for understanding the limits and potentials of this activity. However, the recent rise of social networking and social media might cast doubt on the legitimacy of this contested term’s continued relevance. Thus, I move from community to self, via the network notation that has come now to dominate our terminologies. I seek to demonstrate that, as the Internet has become interleaved with everyday life to the point where there is no distinction, for many people, between online and offline, we need to think again about how and what community might mean. In doing so, I suggest that the relationship between self and others, mediated or otherwise, is always one of shared ‘place’ but that contemporary practices of social networking differ significantly in how that place is shared and the degree of collective effort required.

History

Event

International Association for the development of the Information Society International Conference on Internet Technologies & Society (2012 : Perth, W.A.)

Publisher

Curtin University of Technology

Location

Perth, W. A.

Place of publication

Perth, W. A.

Start date

2012-11-28

End date

2012-11-30

Language

eng

Publication classification

EN.1 Other conference paper

Title of proceedings

IADIS ITS 2012 : Proceedings of THE IADIS International Conference : Internet Technologies & Society

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