Thursday, November 19, 2015

Session 12 Rapporteur Notes

Below are the rapporteur notes from last class. My apologies for the appearance at times, Blogger formatted it a certain way that I couldn't override.

Class presentations will be on the last day of class, everyone will give a 5-7 minute presentation about the key data utilized, methodology, and arguments. A Q&A period will be built in to solicit more opinions, think of this as the peer review we did for the first paper.

Discussion of Current Events (racial tension @ University of Missouri)- what comments can we make about our engagement with social media?

              Two people arrested after threatening comments at Mizzou

              Timeline of events before comments on Yik Yak (swastika in feces, stopping of                                   Chancellor’s car during parade, hunger strike, football team refusing to play, various hate                     acts against black students)

              Hateful comments posted after Black Anthology here at Wash U

Role of social media in helping aid revolutions (Arab Spring, BLM) – is this revolutionary?

People are able to create provocative posts and have discussion, but goes away as hype dies down. People assume it’s fixed, and we need to not let the media dictate where our interests are.

SM offers the promise to make your message known, but there’s an ephemeral aspect to it –                 do we trivialize what’s going on, or do we democratize events by allowing people to talk?

Talk about showing solidarity vs. “actually doing something”. Disconnect between “trending”             and actually connecting people through a shared struggle. People seem to be on different sides             about this.

New meta-narrative around the correct way to care and be socially literate.

Galvanizing nature of SM, and knowledge gaining. People become more educated, and people             are able to show emotional, spiritual support to each other.

What about the fact that we often restrict our posts, and they don’t reach other people? What                good is saying “I agree with this political message,” is that demonstration of solidarity                         actually doing? How does wanting to change your scope (making it public or private) affect                 anything?

          Solidarity created through SM has a purpose, whether or not it will actually be seen at                         Mizzou.

            With anonymity, people have the ability to shout their thoughts, and like to troll if they think               there might be little consequence. Anonymity can be beneficial, but can also be highly abused             (case in StL of mother posing as 13y/o boy and girl’s subsequent suicide)

            Expectations are different according to the media used. If we text someone something private,             we might have the expectation that it would stay that way. Technology platform creates                       different expectations of usage – communication ideologies?

           Regardless of the medium used, if there is trust with a person, that is not really going to                        change actions. Sending pictures to someone might seem like a good idea at the time.

Mizzou professor’s inappropriate response to concerns of black students in light of comments and threats (threats are just bullies)

What about someone who actually might be joking, how do we handle that? We know not to make jokes about bombs at airports, is Yik Yak the same? We should take every post seriously, there is the possibility that they are not joking.

Racist posts as performative, meant to engender certain reactions and stir up the pot

Someone at Hannah’s school sentenced for things he’d posted online (planning to blow up mall, but didn’t have equipment – does this constitute a threat?

What is the role of declarative announcement and online space, the catharsis seems to                be inviting, being heard and making feelings known. The formality of an email adds                to the threatening aspect.

Are people who have terrible plans actually wondering if anyone will try to stop them?

We should probably take seriously any kind of announcement regarding hurting mass               groups of people

China: cyber-vigilantes, “human flesh search engines” people hunt down those worthy of punishment. Duke student targeted by angry Chinese who posted her information and forced her parents into hiding. Vilified and portrayed by Chinese National news as “most disgusting Chinese student abroad”

Context matters when communicating, how does the form of media change the way we engage with each other?

“You Can’t Text Message Breakup” – portrayals of anger and revenge at being broken up with, or making fun of the response that one might have at being broken up with. The bf was actually cyberbullied for breaking up with the girl via text after two years.

              It matters how you end the relationship, apparently how you do it makes a big difference.

              Doing it a certain way gets framed as cowardice, a breaching of social norms.

              Breaking up with someone before was likely a larger affair, had to be in person,

Difference in sensibilities with respect to media ideologies: formality of emails. Seems that millennials have an idea of this usage as more formal. Can email be too impersonal because it can be seen as too formal, and text message might be thought of as a joke.

Theory is helpful (media ideologies) because certain things might become outdated. How did people experience texting as new, there wasn’t as much of a widespread consensus.

We have social media circles, and we don’t stray outside of them as much as we might think. We develop conventions within them, and act upon them regularly.

                        Broader shared cultural phenomenon, or shared practices between a few people.
Discussions of conventions via text and facebook, how particularized they are. They might change depending on situation and age. People have distinctive ways of expressing themselves, and conventional priorities. Technology and it’s the structure itself might have a certain bearing on how we construct sentences.

Our use of technology has interesting implications for how we engage other media which are note as advanced, e.g. trying to touch a screen that is not a touchscreen, symbols become detached from the thing they used to represent (floppy disk as save icon)

The only way we have to understand something is by the other things around it. We can only understand what it means to be dumped by email/text/etc by understanding the other possible options. Responses to modern media are in conversation with older ways of communicating.

Expectation that you have to constantly be talking because you are able to, the idea that it’s awkward when you run out of things to say. We depend so little on proximity to our friends, where do we still place the value of physical face-time?

What about the next generation, we have the potential to arrive at a point where breaking up with someone via text is acceptable, media ideologies have the potential to change.

Helen brings up the idea that it is hard to just sit down and talk without doing anything else. Is moving forward necessarily an evolutionary process, advancements don’t appear to strive toward any particular end. Result of technology seems to be to make technology itself necessary. What’s popular is what has been able to survive the market, and not necessarily what was meant to better our lives.

Fixed: The science/fiction of human enhancement

             Technology that changes the physical being that makes you into a normative model.

             Desires of people with disability for accommodations.

Idea of disability as a social construct, why should we view able bodies and minds as the standard by which we judge people. This entails a paradigm shift wherein we alter explicit practices of infrastructure and languages.

            Our conventions (“stand up for 12 hours”) are often unintentionally exclusive.

Idea that someone is completely healthy if they don’t appear to have a physical disability. If you can’t see it, it’s not real.

Women on PLM feel like they are not fulfilling certain roles and thus reach out for support. Why does this space only exist online?

What happens online is still very much real, emotions created which transfer over to the human experience. 

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