Thoroughly revised and updated, this new edition of Blogging
provides an accessible study of a now everyday phenomenon and
places it in a historical, theoretical and contemporary context.
The second edition takes into account the most recent research and
developments and provides current analyses of new tools for
microblogging and visual blogging.
Jill Walker Rettberg discusses the ways blogs are integrated into
today’s mainstream social media ecology, where comments and
links from Twitter and Facebook may be more important than the
network between blogs that was significant five years ago, and
questions the shift towards increased commercialization and
corporate control of blogs. The new edition also analyses how smart
phones with cameras and social media have led a shift towards more
visual emphasis in blogs, with photographs and graphics
increasingly foregrounded.
Authored by a scholar-blogger, this engaging book is packed with
examples that show how blogging and related genres are changing
media and communication. It gives definitions and explains how
blogs work, shows how blogs relate to the historical development of
publishing and communication and looks at the ways blogs structure
social networks.
Spis treści
Acknowledgements vii
Introduction 1
1 What is a Blog? 5
A brief history of weblogs 6
How blogs have adapted to a social media ecosystem 14
Three blogs 17
Defining blogs 30
2 From Bards to Blogs 36
Orality and literacy 37
The introduction of print 41
Print, blogging and reading 44
Printed precedents of blogs 45
The Late Age of Print 47
A modern public sphere? 50
Hypertext and computer lib 53
Technological determinism or cultural shaping of technology?
57
3 Blogs, Communities and Networks 62
Social network theory 66
Distributed conversations 69
Technology for distributed communities 72
Facebook and Twitter as microblogs 76
Publicly articulated relationships 82
Colliding networks 83
Emerging social networks 86
4 Citizen Journalists? 90
Bloggers’ perception of themselves 93
When it matters whether a blogger is a journalist 94
Objectivity, authority and credibility 97
First-hand reports: blogging from a war zone 101
First-hand reports: chance witnesses 104
Bloggers as independent journalists and opinionists 107
Gatewatching 108
Symbiosis 112
5 Blogs as Narratives 115
Goal-oriented narratives 116
Ongoing and episodic narration 118
Blogs as self-exploration 127
Fictions or hoaxes? Kaycee Nicole and lonelygirl15 129
6 Blogging Brands 135
The human voice 136
Advertisements and sponsored posts on blogs 139
Micropatronage 145
Sponsored posts and pay-to-post 147
Exploitation and alienation? 152
Corporate blogs 155
Engaging bloggers 161
Corporate blogging gone wrong 164
7 The Future of Blogging 169
Implicit participation and the perils of personalized media
170
References 176
Blogs Mentioned 186
Index 189
O autorze
Jill Walker Rettberg is professor of digital culture at University of Bergen.