Post on 09-May-2015
Week Four
“We believe that current youth adoption of digital media production and ‘social media’ is happening in a unique historical moment, tied to longer-
term and systemic changes in sociability and culture.”
http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/full_pdfs/Hanging_Out.pdf
Hanging OutHanging Out
1. Getting Together and Being Together – socializing on line and off for identity construction – it is often online first to set up getting together.
a) Sharing, Posting, Linking, and Forwardingb) Music first, then videos – youtube watched offline together
2. Hanging out through back channels – text, Facebook, Myspace, blogs..under no special control from home or school.
Messing AroundMessing Around• More intense engagement – looking around,
“lurking” – chat roulette
““Messing Around”Messing Around”• Experimental play – photo-tools, media
creation, techie monitoring (e.g. free ringtone creation)
• Messing around involves a more open-ended genre of participation
““Geeking Out”Geeking Out”
• Intense commitment or engagement with media or technology, often one particular media property, genre, or a type of technology
• involves learning to navigate esoteric domains of knowledge and practice and being able to participate in communities that traffic in these forms of expertise.Blogs, remizes, games, podscasts
• Participate in closed IRC groups or specialized forums rather than general fan discussion forums, which they see as catering to less knowledgeable fans. –Second Life
• Rewriting the rules - code hacking, creating and exploiting cheats, and making derivative works such as machinima (real time animated movie techniques – using game engines) and game modifications – Limewire – avoiding copyright rules
Why Does it Matter?Why Does it Matter?understanding the new digital
generationThe following video and slides are my edited remix of Michael Wesch’s
presentation done on Slideshare.com and YouTube. Dr. Wesch is a pioneer in social media education and was recently named Professor of the Year
“What we are encountering is a panicky, an almost hysterical, attempt to escape from the deadly anonymity of modern life ... and the prime cause is not vanity ... but the craving of people who feel their personality sinking lower and lower into the whirl of indistinguishable atoms to be lost in a mass civilization."
“What we are encountering is a panicky, an almost hysterical, attempt to escape from the deadly anonymity of modern life ... and the prime cause is not vanity ... but the craving of people who feel their personality sinking lower and lower into the whirl of indistinguishable atoms to be lost in a mass civilization."
- Henry Seidel Canby 1926
It's a one-wayIt's a one-wayconversationconversation
You have to be on TVYou have to be on TVto have a voiceto have a voice
You have to be on TVYou have to be on TVto be significantto be significant
The MTV Generation
• Short attention spans• Materialistic• Narcissistic• Not easily impressed
“in the midst of a fabulous array of historically unprecedented and utterly mind-boggling stimuli ...
the search for identity and recognitionthe search for identity and recognition
the search for the authentic selfthe search for the authentic self
the search for the authentic selfthe search for the authentic self
Charles Taylor's “Ethics of Authenticity” (1991)Charles Taylor's “Ethics of Authenticity” (1991)
Two Slides:Two Slides:
Charles Taylor's “Ethics of Authenticity” (1991)Charles Taylor's “Ethics of Authenticity” (1991)
Two Slides: Two Slides: towards ...towards ...
Charles Taylor's “Ethics of Authenticity” (1991)Charles Taylor's “Ethics of Authenticity” (1991)
Two Slides: Two Slides: towards ...towards ...
1. “self-centered modes of self-fulfilment”1. “self-centered modes of self-fulfilment”
Charles Taylor's “Ethics of Authenticity” (1991)Charles Taylor's “Ethics of Authenticity” (1991)
Two Slides: Two Slides: towards ...towards ...
1. “self-centered modes of self-fulfilment”1. “self-centered modes of self-fulfilment” 2. “negation of all horizons of 2. “negation of all horizons of significance”significance”
Charles Taylor's “Ethics of Authenticity” (1991)Charles Taylor's “Ethics of Authenticity” (1991)
Two Slides: Two Slides: towards ...towards ...
1. “self-centered modes of self-fulfilment”1. “self-centered modes of self-fulfilment” disengagementdisengagement 2. “negation of all horizons of 2. “negation of all horizons of significance”significance” Charles Taylor's “Ethics of Authenticity” (1991)Charles Taylor's “Ethics of Authenticity” (1991)
Two Slides: Two Slides: towards ...towards ...
1. “self-centered modes of self-fulfilment”1. “self-centered modes of self-fulfilment” disengagement disengagement 2. “negation of all horizons of 2. “negation of all horizons of significance”significance” fragmentationfragmentation
Charles Taylor's “Ethics of Authenticity” (1991)Charles Taylor's “Ethics of Authenticity” (1991)
Two Slides: Two Slides: towards ...towards ...
1. “self-centered modes of self-fulfilment”1. “self-centered modes of self-fulfilment” disengagement disengagement 2. “negation of all horizons of 2. “negation of all horizons of significance”significance” fragmentationfragmentation special interest sound bite politics special interest sound bite politics
Charles Taylor's “Ethics of Authenticity” (1991)Charles Taylor's “Ethics of Authenticity” (1991)
If the conversations of our cultureIf the conversations of our culturenow happen here ...now happen here ...
Why this matters ...Why this matters ...
not controlled by the few not controlled by the few not one-waynot one-waycreated by, for, and around networks, not massescreated by, for, and around networks, not massestransform individual pursuits into collective actiontransform individual pursuits into collective actionmakes “group” formation “ridiculously easy”makes “group” formation “ridiculously easy”
(Paquet/Shirky) (Paquet/Shirky)
Why this might Why this might deeplydeeply matter ... matter ...
We know ourselves We know ourselves through our relations with others. through our relations with others.
New media create new ways of relating to others.New media create new ways of relating to others.New media create new ways of knowing New media create new ways of knowing
ourselves.ourselves.
1,728,000 minutes/day
Over 1,000x faster than you can watch
493,714 videos/day
493,714 videos/day(just on YouTube)
1,000,000+ online videos per day
over 99.9% irrelevant to you (estimated)
Who is on YouTube
(percentage of videos featuring people of different ages)
viewed by less than 1% of Americansviewed by less than 1% of Americans
What are the Components of What are the Components of Digital Citizenship Digital Citizenship
1. Digital Etiquette: rules and policy
2. Digital Communication: electronic exchange of information
3. Digital Literacy: process of learning about technology and the use of technology
4. Digital Access: full electronic participation in society.
5. Digital Commerce: electronic buying and selling of goods.
6. Digital Law & Ethics: electronic responsibility for actions and deeds
7. Digital Rights & Responsibilities: those freedoms extended to everyone in a digital world.
8. Digital Health & Wellness: physical and psychological well-being in a digital world.
9. Digital Security (self-protection): electronic precautions to guarantee safety.
Society & Citizenship- Twitter http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/mon-march-2-2009/twitter-frenzy
http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/world/2009/06/18/dcl.barnett.iran.social.networks.cnn?iref=videosearch
Can 140 Characters Make a Difference?Can 140 Characters Make a Difference?http://www.splashmedia.com/resources/blog/changing-the-world-in-140-characters-or-less/