Virtual publics : policy and community in an electronic age / edited by Beth E. Kolko. [0231118260 (cloth : alk. paper) ] New York : Columbia University Press, c2003.
Call#: Van Pelt Library HM851 .V576 2003
Call#: Van Pelt Library HM851 .V576 2003
Silver, David. "Communication, Community, Consumption: An Ethnographic Exploration of an Online City." From the book listed above, pp.327-352.
This article provides a good background in a case study of early online communities and highlights many scholars in the field (check out the references for other places to go for research); it also establishes a useful vocabulary for discussing issues in internet social networks. The potential power of these online communities is seen in the blurring of the border between online and offline communities, “the virtualization of real space” and vice versa. The online community BEV didn’t succeed as a real community on the Internet, but ended up being more of “an online sphere for consumption” used in very practical, as opposed to social ways. The flame wars actually drove more people to be interested in the network; social drama gave BEV a temporary boost, but it still didn’t excel in the way its founders had hoped. This very early example of an online community is dated in its practice, but the case study is still useful to read in the way that it predicts the greater social networks of the future which have worked out some of the kinks that failed in this system (like being so geographically limited). Many of the issues it brings up, like the blurring of borders between virtual and real, are still pertinent in social networks today.
tagged enthography flame_wars online_communities social_networks virtual_spaces
by rachee
...on 10-MAR-07

