The World of ConnectionsLectorial Week 10Krystina Benson
Please Note: • LEX is seen to be one of the main measures of individual as well as team teaching efficacy at QUT
• As a result of feedback from last semester (for those who did do KCB201, sem 1, 2010), the unit schedule is being rearranged and unit assessments are also being refined. The unit has also been renamed New Media: Internet, Self and Beyond to reflect its focus more accurately.
• This unit - KCB 202 - is still under reconstruction and your feedback is vital to its improvement. Personally, as your tutor I find it highly useful
to read your feedback. I think about it, reflect on it and incorporate it into my teaching.
TO ACCESS LEX: Go to QUT Virtual under Student Messages box, under the Welcome tab, a Learning Experience Survey message will appear. They then click on the link 'Complete the survey'.
LEX is here . . . From now until Week 12
Agenda
Notices Attendance Tools to help you with your case studies Engaging with the readings Video – watch portion of youtube ‘reading’ Wiki time, question time, case study time
Assignment 1: Individual Wiki Contributions
Due date: This week - Week 10, Friday, 24 September, 12 midnight
No contributions after this date will be included in your evaluation, however you can contribute as much as you like…
Please Note:
No lecture this week.
Please Note:
No lectures or tutorials during the week of 27 Sept. - 1 Oct.
Databases to start your research from
ProquestProject Muse EBSCOHostSwetswiseFactivaQUT Liaison Librarian’s recommendations
are also online
Some Journals for Research Theory, Culture & Society European Journal of
Communication Bulletin of Science,
Technology & Society First Monday, online journal Journal of Computer-Mediat
ed Communication (JCMC), online journal
Fibreculture, online journal M/C Journal, online journal Ctheory, online journal Discourse & Communication
Theory, Culture & Society European Journal of
Communication Bulletin of Science,
Technology & Society First Monday, online journal Journal of Computer-Mediat
ed Communication (JCMC), online journal
Fibreculture, online journal M/C Journal, online journal Ctheory, online journal
Referencing Management Software
EndNote: software and training available to current QUT students
Zotero: online, free and integrated into Firefox. No training from QUT
Tutorial Exercise
We are going to write and explain an absence from a pre-arranged appointment….
Grab 1 piece of paper from each bagThey tell you’re the medium in which you are writingAnd the person to whom you are writing itYou have 10 minutes to write your noteWe will read these aloud and try to guess the medium and
audienceAnd see what we think about it….
Reflective Questions
What was the medium?Who was the intended recipient?Did this note work well? Yes or No – why?What does this tell us about media?What does this tell us about media audience?
Week 10 Readings
(1) Anthropological introduction to YouTube
Presentation delivered by Michael Wesch, June 23, 2008, U.S. Library of Congress, 55 mins, 33 secs. Available online at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TPAO-lZ4_hU
(2) The Social Affordance of the Internet for Networked Individualism
Wellman, B., et. Al., (2003). Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication Vol: 8 Issue: 3. Available online at: http://jcmc.indiana.edu/vol8/issue3/wellman.html
Why different than a world based in text? Separation of form and content “Not just about information its about linking people, and in ways we
haven’t before, and in ways we can’t predict” Discusses - User generated content and user generated ranking (Digg,
Delicious), user generated organisation (iGoogle page), user generated distribution – why is this important?
Integrated Mediascape – not just youtube Not content, not tools, but “media mediate human relations” How goes these concepts relate to Actor Network Theory? Consider the communication technologies as actants and how they play a
role as an active part in the development of a network, rather than simply inanimate tools that only achieve meaning when utilized by human beings.
Anthropological Introductionto YouTube (Wesch, 2008)
“Media as mediating human relationships.…When media
changes, human relationships change”
(Michael Wesch, 2009)
Even before the coming of the Internet, other social, economic and technological phenomena affected the transition from groups to networks:
Social Changes: Birth control and liberalized divorce laws and dual-career families have both reflected and driven the transition from a place-to-place to a person-to-person mode of domestic and community life.
Land-Use Changes: Zoning separation of residential from commercial and work uses meant that people had less contact with coworkers in the community and that their travel time had eaten into their community networking time.
Technological Changes: The proliferation of car ownership, expressways, affordable air transportation, and inexpensive long-distance telephony enabled people to have more frequent meaningful contact with physically distant relatives and friends
The Social Affordance of the Internet for Networked Individualism (Wellman et al, 2003)
“More importantly, we argue that citizenship (including e-citizenship) is affected by the ways in which Internet use is in a positive feedback loop with the turn away from solidary, local, hierarchical groups and towards fragmented, partial, heavily-communicating social networks” (Wellman et al, 2003).
What are the potential consequences of this?
The Social Affordance of the Internet for Networked Individualism (Wellman et al, 2003)
NumaNuma…Infectious Happiness
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=60og9gwKh1o
Your turn – what do you watch on YouTube?
Come up and show us.