User:Natasa Siencnik/notes/jenkins/: Difference between revisions
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'''Henry Jenkins:''' Blog This! In: <i>Fans, Bloggers, and Gamers. Exploring Participatory Culture</i>, NYU Press, 2006. | '''Henry Jenkins:''' Blog This! In: <i>Fans, Bloggers, and Gamers. Exploring Participatory Culture</i>, NYU Press, 2006. <br /> | ||
<br /> | <i>Blog This!</i> first appeared in Technology Review in February 2002.<br /> | ||
<br /> | <br /> | ||
<div style="column-count:2;-moz-column-count:2;-webkit-column-count:2"> | <div style="column-count:2;-moz-column-count:2;-webkit-column-count:2"> | ||
# | #About Henry Jenkins' Blog | ||
#*Monthly column <i>Digital Renaissance</i> since 2001 | |||
#*first for print and then the online edition fo Technology Review | |||
#*responding to a range of developments between technology and culture | |||
#*rehearse arguments that will later be translated into academic writing | |||
#*Gap between traditional journalism and blogging | |||
#*today bloggers might be important rassroots intermediaries | |||
#*at the time of "Blog This!" many found the assertions overstated | |||
#*bloggers started being an emerging force in American media culture | |||
#Bloggers | |||
#*bloggers are turning online into an extreme sport | |||
#*journalists surf the Web, bloggers snowboard it | |||
#*bloggers are the minutemen of the digital revolution | |||
#Blog | |||
#*<i>blog</i> is short for <i>Web log</i> | |||
#*logs are compendia of curous information and intersting links | |||
#*improvements in Web design made it easier to create their Web logs | |||
#*blogs are more dynamic than home pages, more permanent than posts | |||
#*more personal than traditional journalism, more public than diaries | |||
#Democracy | |||
#*What happens to democracy in current media environment, where power is concentrated in the hands of a few publishers and networks? | |||
#*bloggin community as force that will shape the information environment | |||
#*grassroots intermediaries may redifine public perception of new media |
Latest revision as of 13:28, 7 November 2010
Abstract
Henry Jenkins: Blog This! In: Fans, Bloggers, and Gamers. Exploring Participatory Culture, NYU Press, 2006.
Blog This! first appeared in Technology Review in February 2002.
- About Henry Jenkins' Blog
- Monthly column Digital Renaissance since 2001
- first for print and then the online edition fo Technology Review
- responding to a range of developments between technology and culture
- rehearse arguments that will later be translated into academic writing
- Gap between traditional journalism and blogging
- today bloggers might be important rassroots intermediaries
- at the time of "Blog This!" many found the assertions overstated
- bloggers started being an emerging force in American media culture
- Bloggers
- bloggers are turning online into an extreme sport
- journalists surf the Web, bloggers snowboard it
- bloggers are the minutemen of the digital revolution
- Blog
- blog is short for Web log
- logs are compendia of curous information and intersting links
- improvements in Web design made it easier to create their Web logs
- blogs are more dynamic than home pages, more permanent than posts
- more personal than traditional journalism, more public than diaries
- Democracy
- What happens to democracy in current media environment, where power is concentrated in the hands of a few publishers and networks?
- bloggin community as force that will shape the information environment
- grassroots intermediaries may redifine public perception of new media