Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Fantastical Respite From the Unexamined Life

The current media equation seeks to dramatize and sensationalize the news. Many reporters quote policy makers, bolstering their reputations by reporting the official lines of the day as truths, only to subvert these professional figures with scandalous narratives when the publication next goes to press. Reporters are taught to keep their opinions far away from their words, assuming that it is possible to remain objective in situations where fellow human beings are involved. However, they are also expected to practice common sense in terms of what to report and with whom to speak. Again, under the assumption that this, by no means, involves a subjective move.

W. Lance Bennett, in his book News: The Politics of Illusion, names this public information cycle the “authority-disorder bias.” Narratives in the news are constructed of “generic plot elements,” or “versatile and tireless themes that can be combined endlessly within personalized, dramatized, and fragmented news episodes” writes Bennett. The news seeks to restore order, he argues, yet where the political landscape was once successfully “normalized,” now “the news increasingly finds ways to challenge the pronouncements of officials and the presumption of order in society.” 

As entertainment and information companies begin to drop away one by one, as these industries continue their pursuit of a golden system to garner the highest ratings, and as the noise generated by an ever-growing number of media outlets, fueled by bright technology and attractive people, reaches a crescendo, a quieter and less aggressive presence asserts itself behind the expensive cameras, thick makeup and years of journalistic experience, seasoned in the field and the newsroom. They are the personal blogs.

An editor at the now defunct Seattle PI recently told me of the unique opportunity the Internet begets for the literary-minded journalist. “Forget the inverted pyramid,” he said with defiance. Instead, the story should flow like a proper narrative. To draw the reader in and establish a personal connection is necessary for building an Internet readership. To create the seamless flow of ideas like the literary page turner may seem surprising coming from the mouth of a news editor at a major newspaper, but the plummeting popularity of hard-news style newspapers demands a change. In trying to move a daily print operation to an online only business, these ideas are at the front of this journalist’s mind.

Where has the personal relevance gone? Where has the background information necessary to truly understanding a local, national or international event or phenomenon been hiding? To what has citizens’ sense of accountability and consciousness been directed? Focused so intently on the highs and lows of human life, the bulk of a person’s daily thoughts, actions and interactions are all but overlooked, swept under the table and thus forgotten.

It is time to shift our definitions of entertainment—as well as the self-definition and world understanding found therein—away from fragmented, climactic moments and toward a less elitist aggregation of collective understanding. In short, we must find the commonplaces upon which seemingly disparate communities may connect.

Dwelling places—as blogs are—have the capacity to evoke what fragmented reality-based experiences can’t establish on their own. These worldviews [or dwelling places] are occupied and shared everyday with those at work and at home and at the store. Blogs have the ability to create these dwelling places in a less ephemeral manner, as symbols and as commonplaces upon which people in varied geographic locations, occupations and ages may converse.  The dwelling places hold patterns of behavior where people are able to negotiate their own identities. To do this they build expectations for how certain qualities should look, thus constructing a framework for how the qualities appear in the day to day.

To look at the qualities that create places—an expert or competent voice, the rhetor’s goodwill toward the audience and liability in terms of character—founds this idea of blogs as dwelling places. The subject of a blog, then, can be anything from the mundane to the outlandish. Rituals themselves, in fact, can function as dwelling places. Oftentimes, the ritual aspect of the day-to-day becomes the sole narrative of personal blogs. The blog format itself begets extreme personalization. Most authors use the first person to address their audience, speaking with them as if across the kitchen table or in step arm in arm down city streets.

All writers, public personas and, for that matter, people in general must establish their ethos when stepping before an audience. This other could be as informal as a new friend or co-worker, or as official as a professor in front of her students, a journalist, or world leader. Part of one’s ethos indeed lies in the situation where confronting the other—setting, time of day, other people. Though much of the trust sought by the rhetor must be invented, created by the speaker herself in moments conducive to audience reception.

Using the first person holds a greater chance of establishing deep connections with the audience, as opposed to second and third which are more informal and barred, less personal.

Molly Wizenberg, one blogger who employs the first person in her writing, is the voice and life behind the experiences, tastes and photographs presented on her popular blog Orangette. Since her beginnings as a food blogger in July of 2004, Wizenberg’s mini-essays have steadily grown in readership as demonstrated by the increase in the number of comments her words provoke. Some posts have, of course, drawn more than others, some seem to have marked turning points in the number of vocal readers. The highest number of comments rally around stories marking personal milestones in Wizenberg’s life: her marriage and subsequent dinner and honeymoon, announcing the publication of her first book and revealing she and her husband’s soon to be restaurant, Delancy. Her readers are thus stirred by the concrete events that make a life; they are fortified by the day-to-day musings, wit, personal memories and, of course, tastes making up the body of her blog.

Wizenberg’s words resonate with her readers on a very personal level. Whether she and her readers share tastes, experiences or geographic proximity, comments take the form of congratulations, laudatory remarks on writing style or simple agreement in a specific love for, say, lobster and San Francisco. Wizenberg is, at the most fundamental level, telling a story. But the difference between her blog and other personal narrative blogs is that she offers people the chance to physically and emotionally take part in her experience. She leaves them with something tangible and lasting, something that will come to fruition hours, days or months later when the craving for a certain butterscotch cookie or céléri rémoulade surfaces. And it’s not just the craving but the possibility of entering such a warm and inviting world that inspires the act of memory, in turn assuring Wizenberg her audience will come by next Monday when she again offers a chair to her table.

Wizenberg’s subject, food, is memorable and sensual and oftentimes seductive. She elaborates on a taste by surrounding it with an inviting experience—often droll and sentimental with just enough irony to keep it respectable.

“If you’ve been reading for a while, you may remember that I have a thing for celery root. It’s sort of the Philip Seymour Hoffman of vegetables: pale and a little scruffy, not exactly handsome by common definitions, but rippling, rippling, with integrity and talent. Vegetables can have integrity, right? And talent? I hope so, or else I’m going to have to find a new analogy, and that could take a while.”  

It is important, however, not to become so immersed in a certain placated comfort, finding meaning all too easily without pushing oneself away from the accustomed daily rituals. David Foster Wallace put it quite extremely when he said, “It seems important to find ways of reminding ourselves that most ‘familiarity’ is meditated and delusive.” Yet, an ongoing critical examination and understanding of the ritualistic activities necessary for physical and psychic relief, in turn creating room for personal development, would not allow a sinking into blind, privileged comfort.

Wallace also noted that true freedom “means being conscious and aware enough to choose what you pay attention to and to choose how you construct meaning from experience. Because if you cannot exercise this kind of choice in adult life, you will be totally hosed.” He was speaking here about boredom, which some would argue is found in the daily rituals that make up the bulk of our life. “Properly handled, boredom can be an antidote to our national dependence on entertainment,” says D. T. Max in The New Yorker when interpreting Long Thing, Wallace’s third and unpublished book.” It is not by mere chance that critiques of fictional narratives are applied so easily when discussing the very real presence of personal blogs, of elevating the personal ritual to a place of significance.

Ella Ophir, in her essay Modernist Fiction and “the accumulation of unrecorded life”, suggests, through critic Erich Auerbach’s reading of Virginia Woolf’s work, that the personal narrative performs a service of human fellowship. “It is precisely the random moment,” he concludes, “which is comparatively independent of the controversial and unstable orders over which men fight and despair; it passes unaffected by them, as daily life. The more it is exploited, the more the elementary things which our lives have in common come to light.”

Blogs blatantly demonstrate foundational, defining elements of human behavior. They reinforce clichés by way of their very intent: it’s not the destination toward which the blogger steps post by post, but the whole long, chronologically listed journey that counts. They function the way any newspaper or special interest magazine would, providing a temporary fantasy world in which to escape for a momentary lapse in reality-based spatial orientation. Indeed, the images transport the viewer to a place of beauty, of chicness, of shine and silent charisma, or to a world of high drama, international intrigue, war and other larger-than-personal-life narratives.

Blogs documenting individuals’ personal style deliberately create a certain persona in the online space, mostly through photographs and with varying levels of commentary. These scrapbooks of self-expression either document the author’s own wardrobe choices or the choices of others encountered in daily life. Regardless of the body upon which the coveted style is draped, a certain aspiration is molded and modified with each new post. One of the more successful blogs of this nature, “The Sartorialist,” is the creation of Scott Schuman who’s aim was to photograph “people on the street” so as to give inspiration to other designers. “Rarely do [designers] look at the whole outfit as a yes or no but they try and look for the abstract concepts of color, proportion, pattern mixing or mixed genre,” explains Schuman on his blog.  He strives—and successfully accomplishes as evidenced by the media attention and his large, dedicated fan base—for the same qualities in his photos. His subjects range from the overtly stylish—models and magazine and artworld individuals all—to the quirky and oddly original. Though, Schuman is successful because of his eye’s discerning consistency when it comes to sartorial presence. He isn’t just shooting the outfit; he captures the subject’s character through their dress, grooming and stance.

Like a camera projects film onto a blank canvas, blogs are a public screen onto which people’s fantasies shine. They out the mind’s inside with pages and pages of fairytale, of desire, of fulfillment. Pages and pages offering a moment’s respite from a stilled dullness, perhaps from sitting inside before a computer screen or from a windowless room, perhaps from some other lonely isolation. In this way, fantasy functions rhetorically—people are always looking for ways to cope. Ironically, that which most would wish to escape from—some daily banality inducing boredom—might just become the fantastical respite from the unexamined life.

As readership of newspapers and print magazines shifts increasingly to web-based outlets, where a wealth of alluring diversions opens wide before the mediating reader, will the staid voice of the objective journalist follow suit? When writing for the web, if indeed print media does become extinct, will the same standards hold up before a young, media-savvy and independently minded audience? When the younger generation raised on blogs and self-selected news bites steers public discourse, will the focus be more introverted and relational, based upon finding those commonplaces so necessary for connecting with an audience on a personal level? Or will the isolated fragmentation of mass media override the opportunity to build community by means of increased communication in blog form?

At the end of the day, we are the meaning-makers, it is us who choose to believe any particular thing, us who consent to the flow or make a rapturous move against some mass or minute current. All of this, then, done in a process of finding our voice or trying to maintain some sort of continuance of this voice if ever thought to be found, perhaps modifying our voice to be in harmony or in opposition to the voices all around. By many methods, so we do this multi vaulted dance of tone and intent; in few moments do we realize a full shift in the Self, defined as that elusive “defining” moment, that marked revolving of time and space in one’s own direction that makes up so much of exalted thought and creative production and other such final unveilings. The million other thoughts and actions and observations are the true definers of character, the filling in of notes between crescendos, so important, foundational and necessary in their own right—essential to attaining some height of meaning, perhaps meaning for-themselves, in their own right, as is

Monday, February 23, 2009

MPP One.

Part I

Using my [soon to be earned] degree in Journalism as well as my experience working and writing in the field, both for the Spectator and currently with the Seattle PI would help to demonstrate credibility and authority on my issue. Having access to people with years of experience and diverse histories bringing them to the similar act of journalism, I’ve gleaned a few ideas and philosophies regarding writing for a public audience. In addition, I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about the intersection of blogging and more formal news publications. Actually, it is this point of intersection where my own two worlds and desires come crashing together, leaving only the option of attempting to rebuild something new from the marled and scalding rubble. Thus, I am personally invested in looking at how personal narrative becomes universally relevant—or at least finds audience in another human being.

An editor at the Seattle PI recently told me of the unique opportunity the Internet begets for the literary-minded writer. “Forget the inverted pyramid*,” he said with defiance. Instead, the story should flow like a proper narrative. To draw the reader in and establish a personal connection is necessary for building an Internet readership. To create the seamless flow of ideas like the literary “page turner” may seem surprising coming from the mouth of a news editor at a major newspaper, but the plummeting popularity of hard-news style newspapers demands a change. In trying to move a daily print operation to an online only business, these ideas are at the front of journalists’ minds.

Furthermore, and after much deliberation, I began a blog myself. I’ve written about my hesitation to enter the vast digital world of empty words and unfounded photos, trying to find meaning in this apparent human desire to express the personal self. Somehow I thought the desire was kept to the circle of writers and photographers and painters, whose life passion is this translation of experience into tangible communication. Perhaps all that was missing was the possibility of space to fill, a medium to enter—or the courage to find said outlet before the ease and proliferation of at-home Internet access and blogging start-up sites.

*The inverted pyramid is the most formal structure in which to compile a news story. The most pertinent and important information goes at the top, words are kept to a minimum, they are blunt and precise with little or no artistry. The paragraphs are like sound bites, able to be cut and moved around at will and without a need for transitions. Invented when wire services were often intercepted mid-transmission or travel, this style sought to cut losses by assuming that if someone seized the messenger while passing on the story, those on the other side of the country would still get enough of the message.

 

Character: In addition to what I’ve mentioned before, I could list other academic papers I’ve written and articles I’ve published.

Sense: Most people are informed about the Internet and have a general knowledge about blogging. It’s probably safe to say that most people under forty actively use the Internet for sources of news, entertainment and for social networking. A large percentage of this demographic might even have their own blog. However, many people, though aware, may not have the understanding of journalistic rules when it comes to the Internet, or the internal struggle in the industry when it comes to digital publication. Furthermore, the depth of the literary analysis cited in this paper is probably not everyday reading for most people. So I will adopt an inclusive voice to invite the reader into the thesis by taking care to connect abstract ideas with the day-to-day reality of personal blogs—a commonplace on which we may meet, depart from and continually refer to.

Goodwill: Most of the ways in which I will establish good sense will also establish goodwill. I will take care not to talk at or down to the audience when explaining concepts, but with them by showing them what I mean and how it is demonstrated. Mostly, though, my voice will be infused with the sincerity toward the reader established as part of good character. The subject itself begets inclusiveness, as I’m trying to bolster the significance of a daily life. 


Part II

Orangette, food blog:

Molly Wizenberg, the voice and life behind the experiences, tastes and photographs presented on her blog Orangette.

Shared Rhetorical Features

Since her beginnings as a food blogger in July of 2004, Wizenberg’s mini-essays have steadily grown in readership as demonstrated by the increase in the number of comments her words provoke. Some posts have, of course, drawn more than others, some seem to have marked turning points in the number of vocal readers. The highest number of comments rally around stories marking personal milestones in Wizenberg’s life: her marriage and subsequent dinner and honeymoon, announcing the publication of her first book and revealing she and her husband’s soon to be restaurant, Delancy. Her readers are thus stirred by the concrete events that make a life; they are fortified by the day-to-day musings, wit, personal memories and, of course, tastes making up the body of her blog.

 Effectiveness of Writing for Audience

Wizenberg’s words resonate with her readers on a very personal level. Whether she and her readers share tastes, experiences or geographic proximity, comments take the form of congratulations, laudatory remarks on writing style or simple agreement in a specific love for, say, lobster and San Francisco. Wizenberg is, at the most fundamental level, telling a story. But the difference between her blog and other personal narrative blogs is that she offers people the chance to physically and emotionally take part in her experience. She leaves them with something tangible and lasting, something that will come to fruition hours, days or months later when the craving for a certain butterscotch cookie or céléri rémoulade surfaces. And it’s not just the craving but the possibility of entering such a warm and inviting world that inspires the act of memory, in turn assuring Wizenberg her audience will come by next Monday when she again offers a chair to her table.

 Engaging Readers’ Emotions

Food is memorable and sensual and oftentimes seductive. Wizenberg elaborates on a taste by surrounding it with an inviting experience—often droll and sentimental with just enough irony to keep it respectable.

If you’ve been reading for a while, you may remember that I have a thing for celery root. It’s sort of the Philip Seymour Hoffman of vegetables: pale and a little scruffy, not exactly handsome by common definitions, but rippling, rippling, with integrity and talent. Vegetables can have integrity, right? And talent? I hope so, or else I’m going to have to find a new analogy, and that could take a while.”  

See full post here 

Rituals themselves can function as dwelling places, as does Orangette.  Oftentimes, the ritual aspect of the day-to-day becomes the sole narrative of personal blogs. The blog format begets extreme personalization. Wizenberg, like most blog authors, uses the first person to address her audience, speaking with them as if across the kitchen table or in step arm in arm down city streets [or through the bounteous farmers market stands]. She divulges memories of past loves, post-graduation anxiety, describes the difficulties of book writing and commemorates those influential to her life.

One afternoon, I remember, we pulled over at a rest stop in New Mexico and shared a slice of blackberry pie that we had bought earlier in the day, in Albuquerque. The wind was whipping my t-shirt around like mad, and my chest felt so tight and painful that I was sure, absolutely sure, that I was dying. Once we got to Oklahoma City, I knew, I would be diagnosed with some sort of rare, fatal condition and given only a few months to live, and everyone would take pity on me and send me back to San Francisco, where I would live out my final days in a Victorian with a view of the bay. It would be beautiful and tragic, not only because I was only 22 and had never had a real boyfriend, but also because I would probably die in the summertime, when there is no fresh Dungeness crab.”

See full post here. 

Finally, Wizenberg’s use of photographs—all taken by her and becoming progressively more professional from year to year—is essential to her stories. They are the lighting to her sentence framed settings—a grey afternoon with tea, cookies and a pile of ruddy old books, a candle-lit table cloth anticipating the arrival of good friends and cream of scallop soup to celebrate new year’s eve. Offering a glimpse of her table, her kitchen, her front porch, the soft colors and somewhat blurry lines in the photographs enhance her writing with orienting subtlety.  

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Minor Analysis Paper

Personal blogs, functioning as public repositories for an individual’s “shoebox” of memory objects, have a significant function in contributing to collective identity. As traditional forms of a collective mass media—like daily newspapers—decline in the wake of the Internet, it becomes more important to examine the social implications of a society defined by the possibility of increased fragmentation. However de-centralized the communication landscape may become, community ties are strengthened as people seek privately aggregated stories from a variety of sources. Where large media outlets are a one-way flow of information, blogs allow audiences a chance to connect with other readers and the writers themselves, building a digital community whose commonplace relies not on geographical location but on cognitive orientation and preference. Personal style blogs are unique in that the human body itself becomes the site for the intersection of the individual and the collective culture, begging further discussion of how the body remains at the center of our social reality and consciousness.

There are and always have been mediated representations of events. Within the last century or so, they have mostly taken the form of mass media, much of it corporately owned and controlled by advertisers’ demands. But in the last decade, with the proliferation and popularity of the Internet, blogs have carved their own space in the communicative hum of collective human experiences. Professional blogs and personal blogs—sometimes overlapping to create a hybrid persona—have become a daily routine in many American’s lives. Ranging from politics to news to fashion and everywhere in between, bloggers interpret, create and convey day-to-day events or personal experiences meaningful to them and to their [hoped for] audience. Some blogs are simply repositories for images, words and sounds [with varying levels of comment] posted on this electronic plane just as an artist pins bits of textile or images and color palates on an inspiration board.

Blogs can be defined as a means of “self-presentation” or “self-expression.”[1] Anyone with access to the Internet and a certain level of technological literacy can begin a blog through blog-hosting sites like blogger, wordpress, movabletype, etc. Step by step tutorials make the process simple; ready-made templates keep this initial level of creativity to a minimum, with the option of creating your own layout. Once a domain name has been chosen, bloggers are free to post as much or as little as they like with few regulations on content. A “comments” section at the bottom of each post allows readers to make themselves known and enter into the conversation.

José van Dijck, in her article “Mediated Memories...” discusses the intersection of the individual with culture, which personal cultural memory depends on. Mediated memories function as defined locations for making sense of the self in relation to the other. “...Mediated memories are crucial sites for negotiating the relationship between the self and culture at large”[2]. This place could be a physical object or—as is the case with blogs—a particular environment. “Collectivity not only evolves around events or shared experience, but can also advance from objects or environments [...] through which people have felt connected spatially”[3]. Specific blogs and the blogosphere as a whole function as non-geographically based commonplaces upon which people may meet and interact. This interaction is crucial to defining personal blogs as sites of mediated memories. 

Memories themselves—as “...creative acts of cultural production and collection through which people make sense of their own lives and their connection to the lives of others”[4]—rely upon a moment’s given cultural opportunities for context. “The decision to record such events is already, to a large extent, stipulated by cultural conventions prescribing which occurrences are symbolic or ritual highlights and thus worth flagging”[5]. The ways in which memories are recorded are also cultural and timely, as well as tied to the content of a memory. “...The ‘mediation of memory’ equally refers to the perception of media in terms of memory as well as to the perception of memory in terms of media”[6]. In other words, what we remember is contingent on our physical ways or methods of representing it. With the advent of new media, the possibilities and outlets for self-expression have increased.

Media falls neatly into Dijck’s discussion of the individual’s dual need in acts of mediated memory. “...Memory is as much about the privacy to inscribe memories for oneself and the desire to be received only by a limited number of assigned recipients, as it is about publicness of or the inclination to share experiences with others and to be read or viewed by a number of unknown viewers or readers”[7]. Though she never mentions blogs in her article, Dijck could very well have summed up the public/private duality that defines and attracts so many people to blogs—both as readers and writers. Every act of memory, for Dijck, involves mediation of those two spheres, resulting in a “...creative tension between individuality and collectivity”[8].

The “confrontations between individuality and collectivity”[9] that Dijck defines as mediated memories are manifested in blogs. Blogs function as sites for cultural analysis because blogs could be defined as nothing more than mediated memories. Dijck quotes Andreas Huyssen:

“The past is not simply there in memory, but it must be articulated to become memory. The fissure that opens up between experiencing an event and remembering it in representation is unavoidable. Rather than remembering or ignoring it, this split should be understood as a powerful stimulant for cultural and artistic creativity”[10].


With blogs, people have found yet another way to carve out their corner of the world and establish themselves therein. Sophie Ward, on her blog “Big Long Open Gash,” sees her space as a source of inspiration. The following is excerpted from one of her posts.

I don’t want to tell you anything unnecessary in this B.L.O.G  but parts of me know that everything is necessary, and that being what I intend to be here, which is a source of inspiration [...] is a noble cause. Before you leave with disdain for my pompousness, let me tell you that when I talk about being a source of inspiration, I want you to please think of this in the way true linguistic philologians understand; for to be a source is to be a kind of tap. I will show you water, but I am not the place where the water comes from. Where does the water come from? That is the question.”[11]

 

Ward’s blog is philosophical and foundational testament to the possibility of using such a space as raw inspiration. She uses word and image to “make the gap bigger, to pull open and pull out all the inside things that many are too afraid to put to light”[12]. However, most blogs are not so blatantly self-reflective.

            Blogs documenting individuals’ personal style deliberately create a certain persona in the online space, mostly through photographs and with varying levels of commentary. These scrapbooks of self-expression either document the author’s own wardrobe choices or the choices of others encountered in daily life. Regardless of the body upon which the coveted style is draped, a certain aspiration is molded and modified with each new post. One of the more successful blogs of this nature, “The Sartorialist,” is the creation of Scott Schuman who’s aim was to photograph “people on the street” so as to give inspiration to other designers. “Rarely do [designers] look at the whole outfit as a yes or no but they try and look for the abstract concepts of color, proportion, pattern mixing or mixed genre”[13]. Schuman strives—and successfully accomplishes as evidenced by the media attention and his large, dedicated fan base—for the same qualities in his photos. His subjects range from the overtly stylish—models and magazine and artworld individuals all—to the quirky and oddly original. Though, Schuman is successful because of his eye’s discerning consistency when it comes to sartorial presence. He isn’t just shooting the outfit; he captures the subject’s character through their dress, grooming and stance.

            Some of Schuman’s best work is not in documenting the fashion and design elite—though a large portion is dominated by this group—rather, it is found in photographs of unassuming individuals who just happened to be in his line of sight. For example, while in Milan at the Calvin Klein runway show, Schuman’s gaze opportunely drifted to the back courtyard where he beheld a group of painters taking their afternoon break. “One guy absolutely stands-out, it’s the scarf - really, what American house-painter wears a scarf that way to paint! Brilliant”[14]. The man, squinting in the sunlight, smiles—tight-lipped yet naturally—directly at the lens. The stark white background—the same space Schuman shot other “fashionistas”—allows for clean lines and a subdued, relaxed mood. Indeed, the light blue collared shirt and cream painters paints, both precisely disheveled and paint-splattered, are marked by the triangle of a scarf around his tanned neck. The effect is transportative; the ethical placement of this image alongside images of said fashionistas an apt and subtle social commentary on the false notion that style need be expensive, untouchable.

 [http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/4686/1648/1600/calvin_painter.jpg].

            Garance Doré is just as successful as Schuman in her photographs of mostly-French fashion ingenuity. Her photographs are successful by the same ability to capture a subject’s character, yet where Schuman captures variety in socio-economic level and style across international boundaries, Doré is known for her near-perfect portrayal of the archetypal French woman. Blogger Joanna Goddard even appealed to Doré for much-coveted advice on how to dress more like a French woman[15].

Doré herself embodies the archetype. As a professional illustrator, she began the blog on the premise of more intimate contact with her readers, something that she readily found when writing “little snapshots” of her life.[16] Written word is a stronger element in “Garance Doré” than in Schuman’s blog. The space functions as a diary for her musings and experiences in the oftentimes wild world of fashion. More personal still is the blog application that allows Doré to create a playlist of her favorite music for readers to listen as they please. However, Doré is firm when explaining to her captive audience that she is not the final word on French style. “Except that the notion of French chicness isn’t rightfully mine. And making generalizations isn’t really my cup of tea. All my answers are therefore subjective enough to dissect Brigitte Bardot’s choucroute*, if she’d hear what I say,”[17] writes Doré on the aforementioned post about French women. She invites readers to, by all means, comment and thus add to the conversation about French style.

            When compiled along with sleek digital format and well-chosen words, blogs create a common place upon which readers may interact with other style-minded individuals. These blogs are a repository for a specific cultural ideal: appearance. Virginia Heffernan, on her NY Times “Medium” blog, recognizes the success of Schuman and Doré. Heffernan argues that blogs of this caliber function the way any haute fashion magazine would—they provide a temporary fantasy world to which to escape for a momentary lapse in reality-based spatial orientation. Indeed, the images transport the viewer to a place of beauty, of chicness, of shine and silent charisma. They are the behind-the-scenes of magazine photos—by contrast staged and modeled by some of the very same girls and boys who appear on the street-style blogs. However, in the cozy context of off-camera or real life, the characters are somehow approachable, even if they incite a longing almost overwhelming enough to deter some viewers from returning.

            Heffernan alludes to consumerism’s current rhetorical situation, where one-time Style.com-devotees [Style.com is the online home of Vogue] find permanent residence. “Vogue’s Style File blog at Style.com, which features celebrities and breaking fashion news, rarely draws a single comment. By contrast, a Garance Doré post of an unnamed woman in houndstooth and stripes drew 78 comments, in French and English”.[18] Furthermore, Heffernan points to Paris’ one-time allure of luxury and extravagance as faded in “this moment of cultural history,”[19] cautioning viewers against falling too easily into such tempting photographic magnetism.

            Even though these blogs are not focused on their authors, attention has nevertheless been directed toward the faceless creators. By aggregating the images of others, they have created—whether intentionally or unintentionally—a persona of their own. Some style blogs focus solely on creating this personal persona, such as the blog “The Cherry Blossom Girl”[20]. In these instances, the persona actually becomes the common place for people to meet, exchanging small and praiseworthy remarks or inviting the blogger to visit the viewer’s own place of self-expression.

            “The Cherry Blossom Girl” is, like “The Sartorialist” and “Garance Doré,” one of the more successful and designed personal style blogs. Alix, the author and model, attended fashion school, has her own clothing label and dabbles in editorial work. Her photographs are clean and clear, with a soft, misty quality that gives her images a dreamlike mood. She describes her posts as “odd little articles filled with photos, drawings, and writing”[21]. The blog’s format is very effective in evoking Alix’s precise personality. Simple and whimsical line drawings seem to come right out of an intimate sketchbook; her voice unassuming and welcoming [as translated from French by Victoria Morrison] is often punctuated with explanation marks. The setting for her photos is just as important as the ensembles themselves. Many of her photos are set against the backdrop of a chateaû in the French countryside, only adding to the fairytale flight of imagination. 

            When it comes to the topic of personal blogs, many will readily agree they provide a means of self-expression and communication, sometimes even stimulating conversation and interaction within a particular community[22]. Where this agreement usually ends, however, is on the question of the degree that such a heightened individualistic pattern of oftentimes one-way communication becomes socially isolating, encouraging the development of an individualistic identity[23]. Some are convinced that online networks can positively affect the individual’s community involvement, where participants in any particular community can extend their conversations. Whereas others maintain that the personality characteristics distinguishing most bloggers from non-bloggers, such as Openness to New Experience and Neuroticism, might lead to consequences such as “increased private self-awareness”[24].

            Guadagno, Okdie and Eno, in their psychological study “Who Blogs? Personality Predictors of Blogging,” say that the anonymous nature of the Internet has decreased and the personalization increased, blogs being at the “forefront” of this shift[25]. The psychologists used the Big Five personality inventory—which measures personality based on five traits—to measure certain characteristics that may differentiate bloggers from non-bloggers. Openness to New Experience and Neuroticism predict blogging, according to this study. Blogging may attract individuals with a tendency to turn inward and cultivate a “private self-awareness”[26].

            Openness to New Experience, for example, is embodied in an individual who is imaginative, curious, artistically talented, intelligent and who has diverse interests[27]. “Blogging is a form of self-expression as well as a form of online behavior so it stands to reason that creative individuals who are willing to try new things are likely to blog”[28]. To create a new world in a geographically vacant digitized landscape requires some creativity and some aspiration towards what the individual wishes people could hear or see. However, the authors suggest that “individuals who are high in neuroticism, characterized by anxiety, worry, emotional reactivity, and nervousness may blog to assuage loneliness or in an attempt to reach out and form social connections with others”[29].

            Ella Ophir, in her article “Modernist Fiction and ‘the accumulation of unrecorded life,’” examines Modernist treatment of the day-to-day narrative specifically in the “novel as an art form[30]”. Blogs are easily applied to her essay, as they are the unique hybrid of narrative and image—the two artistic mediums she discusses.

Ophir quotes Laurie Langbauer[31] in discussing how some thinkers and artists not focused—as is the novel—on ordinary lives demonstrate through their work a preference for the aesthetic, on the object as defining the world. Langbauer writes about the series novel where a parallel can again be drawn between blogs and this traditional written literary form. Instead of a series of separate novels, one encounters a series of daily or weekly posts. “The series, Langbauer writes, does aspire to an ‘endless replication of what is already the very universe people take for granted around them[32]”.  The “novel as an art form,” distinguishes Ophir, functions differently than other forms of art. Instead of creating objects, the narrative creates characters, “... the creation of personalities and lives[33]”. Ophir legitimizes treatment of the everyday in modernist literature, in the “novel as an art form,” by showing how it is the “neglect of lives, not things” being expressed therein. To do so she shows how the novel differs from other art forms both as a medium and in what subject is “defamiliarized” or to what extent the artist uses “renovative perception”—the term used to explain how artists move their audience to see the day-to-day in a new light. “Defamiliarization” refers to the act of making the “mundane” new, stimulating again: “... it also tries to redeem the everyday by rescuing it from its opacity, de-familiarizing it and making us newly attentive to its mysteries[34]”. Ophir says this is done in two contrasting ways: through “renovative perception” and blatant degradation of the everyday. The former affirms the constant presence of mystery and importance in the everyday, arguing that people are merely inattentive to this presence. Thus, this characterization uses defamiliarization to “turn us back to the everyday, newly able to perceive the ‘mysteries’ already there[35]”.  The latter, however,  denies that such significance ever existed, holding that “...the shift towards abstraction in the visual arts [is] a repudiation of the deficiency and defectiveness of actual life[36]”. The distinction here is sanctification of the everyday verses rupture with the mundane. Many blogs seek to perform the former task, elevating the simple act of eating breakfast or getting dressed to places highly esteemed, artistically or aesthetically significant and even worthy of daily following.

Personal style blogs are akin to novels as described by Ophir: the “...imaginative chronicling of everyday lives... meticulous replication of the material world...[37]”. However, it is here that she separates “the novelistic interest in the undistinguished life” from “the romantic sanctification of the ordinary world, even though,” she admits, “the two sometimes appear in tandem[38]”. Blogs are unique in that they combine these two elements: the narrative of personal life with exultation of the objects used to fabricate this projected persona. The attempt to define the self becomes wrapped up with the objects at the bloggers disposal—to return to Dijck’s theory, one’s “mediated memories.” In expanding upon this idea of Object-Person, Ophir cites Wordsworth and Whitman, even jumping ahead to Warhol’s artistic commentary on consumerism. “Renovative perception orients us not so much to one another as to creation. It sanctifies the violet and the railyard (and in a later stage, the Brillo box and the soup can), but not, or not necessarily, the ordinary person[39]”.

Herein, aestheticism becomes dangerous because somewhere the physical touch or companionship of another human being as implied by the object could be abandoned, the object itself becoming the site of solace. The importance of the individual is so defined in the object. When the object is exulted above the character, then, or necessary to define the character defamiliarization becomes an exchange between the eye and the object. Ophir quotes Viktor Shklovsky in his essay “Art as Technique: “’the purpose of art, then, is to lead us to a knowledge of a thing through the organ of sight instead of recognition[40]”. The object comes first, dictating cognitive recognition or understanding. 

Returning to Dijck’s discussion of mediated memory—the basis for this larger conversation about blogging—after examining the actual sites where memory is created and incorporated into the collective culture, it becomes clear that blogs are significant locations for cultural analysis. As sites of memory, blogs embody the tension arising from the intersection of the individual with culture. Expression of this basic human act of remembering is dependent on culture and available means of communication. Examples of this creative eruption are found in Ward’s, Schuman’s, Doré’s and Alix’s blogs, respectively. Though their focuses are slightly different, all represent the carving out of a digitized landscape and subsequent filling of space with the images, words and sounds culturally available to them. Problems may arise when reader or blogger becomes increasingly captivated by the accessibility of this dreamworld, relying on it as touchstone for reality and aspiration. But no matter one’s “preferred mode of collecting,”[41] the choices made at each moment of the traumatic intersection of the Self and the Other, we actively create space—whether in conscious acts like blogging or in unconscious day-to-day choices, like what to eat or mode of transportation. Something missing from this conversation is philosophical implication of the very act of blogging—making the unconscious conscious by elevating the personal day-to-day narrative to a place of public interest and importance.



[1] “Who Blogs?”

[2] “Mediated Memories” p.273

[3] Mediated Memories” p.267

[4] “Mediated Memories” p.262

[5] “Mediated Memories” p. 263

[6] “Mediated Memories” p.272

[7] Mediated Memories” p.269

[8] “Mediated Memories” p.270

[9] Mediated Memories” p.275

[10] “Mediated Memories” p.268

[11] “Big Long Open Gash” August 17, 2008

[12] “Big Long Open Gash” January 28, 2009

[13] http://www.thesartorialist.com/bio.html

[14] “The Sartorialist” July 20, 2006 http://thesartorialist.blogspot.com/search/label/My%20Favorites

[15] “A Cup of Joe” January 9, 2008 http://joannagoddard.blogspot.com/2009/01/how-to-dress-like-french-woman.html

[16] “Garance Doré” http://www.garancedore.fr/en/a-propos/

[17] “Garance Doré” January 9, 2008 http://www.garancedore.fr/en/2009/01/09/la-femme-francaise/

[18] “Pop Couture”

[19] “Pop Couture”

[20] “The Cherry Blossom Girl” http://www.thecherryblossomgirl.com/about/

[21] “The Cherry Blossom Girl” http://www.thecherryblossomgirl.com/about/

[22] “Interactive Online Journals and Individualization”

[23] “Interactive Online Journals and Individualization”

[24] Who Blogs? Personality Predictors of Blogging”

[25] “Who Blogs” p.2

[26] “Who Blogs”

[27] “Who Blogs?” p.9

[28] “Who Blogs?” p.9

[29] “Who Blogs?” p.9-10

[30] “Modernist Fiction and ‘the accumulation of unrecorded life’” p.10

[31] In her book “Novels of Everyday Life: The Series in English Fiction 1850-1940”

[32] “Modernist Fiction and ‘the accumulation of unrecorded life’” p.8

[33] “Modernist Fiction and ‘the accumulation of unrecorded life’” p.10

[34] “Modernist Fiction and ‘the accumulation of unrecorded life’” p.7

[35] “Modernist Fiction and ‘the accumulation of unrecorded life’” p.7

[36] “Modernist Fiction and ‘the accumulation of unrecorded life’” p.8

[37] “Modernist Fiction and ‘the accumulation of unrecorded life’” p.9

[38] “Modernist Fiction and ‘the accumulation of unrecorded life’” p.9

[39] “Modernist Fiction and ‘the accumulation of unrecorded life’” p.9

[40] “Modernist Fiction and ‘the accumulation of unrecorded life’” p.9

[41] “Mediated Memories” p.275

Monday, February 2, 2009

Minor Analysis Paper

Personal blogs, functioning as public repositories for an individual’s “shoebox” of memory objects, have a significant function in contributing to collective identity. As traditional forms of a collective mass media—like daily newspapers—decline in the wake of the Internet, it becomes more important to examine the social implications of a society defined by the possibility of increased fragmentation. However de-centralized the communication landscape may become, community ties are strengthened as people seek privately aggregated stories from a variety of sources. Where large media outlets are a one-way flow of information, blogs allow audiences a chance to connect with other readers and the writers themselves, building up a digital community whose commonplace relies not on geographical location but on cognitive orientation and preference. Personal style blogs are unique in that the body itself becomes the site for the intersection of the individual and the collective culture, begging further discussion of how the body remains at the center of our social reality—and consciousness.

There are and always have been mediated representations of events. Within the last century or so, they have mostly taken the form of mass media, much of it corporately owned and controlled by advertisers’ demands. But in the last decade, with the proliferation and popularity of the Internet, blogs have carved their own space in the communicative hum of collective human experiences. Professional blogs and personal blogs—sometimes overlapping to create a hybrid persona—have become a daily routine in many American’s lives. Ranging from politics to news to fashion and everywhere in between, bloggers interpret, create and convey day-to-day events or personal experiences meaningful to them and to their {hoped for} audience. Some blogs are simply repositories for images, words and sounds {with varying levels of comment} posted on this electronic plane just as an artist pins bits of textile or images and color palates on an inspiration board.

Blogs can be defined as a means of “self-presentation” or “self-expression.”[1] Anyone with access to the Internet and a certain level of technological literacy can begin a blog through any blog-hosting site like blogger, wordpress, movabletype, etc. Step by step tutorials make the process simple; ready-made templates keep this initial level of creativity to a minimum, with the option of creating your own layout. Once a domain name has been chosen, bloggers are free to post as much or as little as they like with few regulations on content. A “comments” section at the bottom of each post allows readers to make themselves known and enter into the conversation.

José van Dijck, in her article “Mediated Memories...” discusses the intersection of the individual with culture, which personal cultural memory depends on. Mediated memories function as defined locations for making sense of the self in relation to the other. “...Mediated memories are crucial sites for negotiating the relationship between the self and culture at large”[2]. This place could be a physical object or—as is the case with blogs—a particular environment. “Collectivity not only evolves around events or shared experience, but can also advance from objects or environments [...] through which people have felt connected spatially”[3]. Specific blogs and the blogosphere as a whole function as non-geographically based commonplaces upon which people may meet and interact. This interaction is crucial to defining personal blogs as sites of mediated memories. 

Memories themselves—as “...creative acts of cultural production and collection through which people make sense of their own lives and their connection to the lives of others”[4]—rely upon a moment’s given cultural opportunities for context. “The decision to record such events is already, to a large extent, stipulated by cultural conventions prescribing which occurrences are symbolic or ritual highlights and thus worth flagging”[5]. The ways in which memories are recorded are also cultural and timely, as well as tied to the content of a memory. “...The ‘mediation of memory’ equally refers to the perception of media in terms of memory as well as to the perception of memory in terms of media”[6]. In other words, what we remember is contingent on our physical ways or methods of representing it. With the advent of new media, the possibilities and outlets for self-expression have increased.

Media falls neatly into Dijck’s discussion of the individual’s dual need in acts of mediated memory. “...Memory is as much about the privacy to inscribe memories for oneself and the desire to be received only by a limited number of assigned recipients, as it is about publicness of or the inclination to share experiences with others and to be read or viewed by a number of unknown viewers or readers”[7]. Though she never once mentions blogs in her article, Dijck could very well have summed up the public/private duality that defines and attracts so many people to blogs—both as readers and writers. Every act of memory, for Dijck, involves mediation of those two spheres, resulting in a “...creative tension between individuality and collectivity”[8].

The “confrontations between individuality and collectivity”[9] that Dijck defines as mediated memories are manifested in blogs. Blogs function as sites for cultural analysis because blogs could be defined as nothing more than mediated memories. Dijck quotes Andreas Huyssen:

“The past is not simply there in memory, but it must be articulated to become memory. The fissure that opens up between experiencing an event and remembering it in representation is unavoidable. Rather than remembering or ignoring it, this split should be understood as a powerful stimulant for cultural and artistic creativity”[10].

 

With blogs, people have found yet another way to carve out their corner of the world and establish themselves therein. Sophie Ward, on her blog “Big Long Open Gash,” sees her space as a source of inspiration. The following is excerpted from one of her posts.

I don’t want to tell you anything unnecessary in this B.L.O.G  but parts of me know that everything is necessary, and that being what I intend to be here, which is a source of inspiration [...] is a noble cause. Before you leave with disdain for my pompousness, let me tell you that when I talk about being a source of inspiration, I want you to please think of this in the way true linguistic philologians understand; for to be a source is to be a kind of tap. I will show you water, but I am not the place where the water comes from. Where does the water come from? That is the question.”[11]

 

Ward’s blog is philosophical and foundational testament to the possibility of using such a space as raw inspiration. She uses word and image to “make the gap bigger, to pull open and pull out all the inside things that many are too afraid to put to light”[12]. However, most blogs are not so blatantly self-reflective.

            Blogs documenting individuals’ personal style deliberately create a certain persona in the online space, mostly through photographs and with varying levels of commentary. These scrapbooks of self-expression either document the author’s own wardrobe choices or the choices of others encountered in daily life. Regardless of whose body the coveted style is draped, a certain aspiration is molded and modified with each new post. One of the more successful blogs of this nature, “The Sartorialist,” is the creation of Scott Schuman who’s aim was to photograph “people on the street” so as to give inspiration to other designers. “Rarely do [designers] look at the whole outfit as a yes or no but they try and look for the abstract concepts of color, proportion, pattern mixing or mixed genre”[13] Schuman strives—and successfully accomplishes as evidenced by the media attention and his large, dedicated fan base—for the same qualities in his photos. His subjects range from the overtly stylish—models and magazine and artworld individuals all—to the quirky and oddly original. Though, Schuman is successful because of his eye’s discerning consistency when it comes to sartorial presence. He isn’t just shooting the outfit; he captures the subject’s character through their dress, grooming and stance.

            Some of Schuman’s best work is not in documenting the fashion and design elite—though a large portion is dominated by this group—rather, in photographs of unassuming individuals who just happened to be in his line of sight. For example, while in Milan at the Calvin Klein runway show, Schuman’s gaze opportunely drifted to the back courtyard where he beheld a group of painters taking their afternoon break. “One guy absolutely stands-out, it’s the scarf - really, what American house-painter wears a scarf that way to paint! Brilliant”[14]. The man, squinting in the sunlight, smiles tight-lipped and naturally directly at the lens. The stark white background—the same space Schuman shot other “fashionistas”—allows for clean lines and a subdued, relaxed mood. Indeed, the light blue collared shirt and cream painters paints, both precisely disheveled and paint-splattered, are marked by the triangle of a scarf around his tanned neck. The effect is transportative; the ethical placement of this image alongside images of said fashionistas an apt and subtle social commentary on the false notion that style need be expensive, untouchable. [http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/4686/1648/1600/calvin_painter.jpg].

            Garance Doré is just as successful as Schuman in her photographs of mostly-French fashion ingenuity. Her photographs are successful by the same ability to capture a subject’s character, yet where Schuman captures variety in socio-economic level and style across international boundaries, Doré is known for her near-perfect portrayal of the archetypal French woman. Blogger Joanna Goddard even appealed to Doré for much-coveted advice on how to dress more like a French woman[15]. Doré herself embodies the archetype. As a professional illustrator, she began the blog on the premise of more intimate contact with her readers, something that she readily found when writing “little snapshots” of her life.[16] Written word is a stronger element than in Schuman’s blog. The space functions as a diary for her musings and experiences in the oftentimes wild world of fashion. More personal still is the blog application that allows Doré to create a playlist of her favorite music for readers to listen as they please. However, Doré is firm when explaining to her captive audience that she is not the final word on French style. “Except that the notion of French chicness isn’t rightfully mine. And making generalizations isn’t really my cup of tea. All my answers are therefore subjective enough to dissect Brigitte Bardot’s choucroute*, if she’d hear what I say,”[17] writes Doré on the aforementioned post about French women. She invites readers to, by all means, comment and thus add to the conversation about French style.

            When compiled along with sleek digital format and well-chosen words, blogs create a common place upon which readers may interact with other style-minded individuals. These blogs are a repository for a specific cultural ideal: appearance. Virginia Heffernan, on her NY Times “Medium” blog, recognizes the success of Schuman and Doré. Heffernan argues that blogs of this caliber function the way any haute fashion magazine would—they provide a temporary fantasy world to which to escape for a momentary lapse in reality-based spatial orientation. Indeed, the images transport the viewer to a place of beauty, of chicness, of shine and silent charisma. They are the behind-the-scenes of magazine photos—by contrast staged and modeled by some of the very same girls and boys who appear on the street-style blogs. However, in the cozy context of off-camera or real life, the characters are somehow approachable, even if they incite a longing almost overwhelming enough to deter some viewers from returning.

            Heffernan alludes to consumerism’s current rhetorical situation, where one-time Style.com-devotees [Style.com is the online home of Vogue] find permanent residence. “Vogue’s Style File blog at Style.com, which features celebrities and breaking fashion news, rarely draws a single comment. By contrast, a Garance Doré post of an unnamed woman in houndstooth and stripes drew 78 comments, in French and English”.[18] Furthermore, Heffernan points to Paris’ one-time allure of luxury and extravagance as faded in “this moment of cultural history,”[19] cautioning viewers against falling too easily into such tempting photographic magnetism.

            Even though these blogs are not focused on their authors, attention has nevertheless been directed toward the faceless creators. By aggregating the images of others, they have created—whether intentionally or unintentionally—a persona of their own. Some style blogs focus solely on creating this personal persona, such as the blog “The Cherry Blossom Girl”[20]. In these instances, the persona actually becomes the common place for people to meet, exchanging small and praiseworthy remarks or inviting the blogger to visit the viewer’s own place of self-expression.

            “The Cherry Blossom Girl” is, like “The Sartorialist” and “Garance Doré,” one of the more successful and designed personal style blogs. Alix, the author and model, attended fashion school, has her own label and dabbles in editorial work. Her photographs are clean and clear, with a soft, misty quality that gives her images a dreamlike mood. She describes her posts as “odd little articles filled with photos, drawings, and writing”[21]. Her blog’s format is very effective in evoking Alix’s precise personality. Simple and whimsical line drawings seem to come right out of a personal sketchbook; her voice unassuming and welcoming {as translated from French by Victoria Morrison} is often punctuated with explanation marks. The setting for her photos is just as important as the ensembles themselves. Many of her photos are set against the backdrop of a chateaû in the French countryside, only adding to the fairytale flight of imagination. 

            When it comes to the topic of personal blogs, many will readily agree they provide a means of self-expression and communication, sometimes even stimulating conversation and interaction within a particular community[22]. Where this agreement usually ends, however, is on the question of the degree that such a heightened individualistic pattern of oftentimes one-way communication becomes socially isolating, encouraging the development of an individualistic identity[23]. Some are convinced that online networks can positively affect the individual’s community involvement, where participants in any particular community can extend their conversations. Whereas others maintain that the personality characteristics distinguishing most bloggers from non-bloggers, such as Openness to New Experience and Neuroticism, might lead to consequences such as “increased private self-awareness”[24].

            Guadagno, Okdie and Eno, in their psychological study “Who Blogs? Personality Predictors of Blogging,” say that the anonymous nature of the Internet has decreased and the personalization increased, blogs being at the “forefront” of this shift[25]. The psychologists used the Big Five personality inventory—which measures personality based on five traits—to measure certain characteristics that may differentiate bloggers from non-bloggers. Openness to New Experience and Neuroticism predict blogging, according to this study. Blogging may attract individuals with a tendency to turn inward and cultivate a “private self-awareness”[26].

            For example, Openness to New Experience is embodied in an individual who is imaginative, curious, artistically talented, intelligent and who has diverse interests[27]. “Blogging is a form of self-expression as well as a form of online behavior so it stands to reason that creative individuals who are willing to try new things are likely to blog”[28] To create a new world in a geographically vacant digitized landscape requires some creativity and some aspiration towards what the individual wishes people could hear or see. However, the authors suggest that “individuals who are high in neuroticism, characterized by anxiety, worry, emotional reactivity, and nervousness may blog to assuage loneliness or in an attempt to reach out and form social connections with others”[29].

Terry Teachout, in her article “Culture in the Age of Blogging,” motivates her readers—potential bloggers themselves—to actively participate and consume information on blogs by presenting an optimistic view of the medium’s future. “When the history of blogging is written a half-century from now, its chroniclers may yet record that the highest achievement of the Internet, a seemingly impersonal piece of postmodern technology, turned out to be its unprecedented ability to bring creatures of flesh and blood closer together”[30] By illustrating a new world in which communication functions on many levels, even closing the social barriers blogging may bring about, Teachout motivates her audience to participate in sculpting the spaces necessary for such interaction.

For her argument to work, Teachout assumes certain values supercede others. Her claim rests upon the historical example of individuals esteeming their own preferences before the traditional mass media. Smaller more precise voices have just as much if not more quality than those on a payroll, she supposes is the widely held sentiment. Teachout creates her own mediated memory of the art world in her blog “About Last Night”[31]. She simultaneously carves out her personal place among the many competing voices and adds to the larger collective experience from where she draws her material.

Returning to Dijck’s discussion of mediated memory—the basis for this larger conversation about blogging—after examining the actual sites where memory is created and incorporated into the collective culture, it becomes clear that blogs are significant locations for cultural analysis. As sites of memory, blogs embody the tension arising from the intersection of the individual with culture. Expression of this basic human act of remembering is dependent on culture and available means of communication. We’ve seen examples of this creative eruption in Ward’s, Schuman’s, Doré’s and Alix’s blogs, respectively. Though their focuses are slightly different, all represent the carving out of a digitized landscape and subsequent filling of space with the images, words and sounds culturally available to them. Problems may arise when reader or blogger becomes increasingly captivated by the accessibility of this dreamworld, relying on it as touchstone for reality and aspiration. But no matter one’s “preferred mode of collecting,”[32] the choices made at each moment of the traumatic intersection of the Self and the Other, we actively create space—whether in conscious acts like blogging or in unconscious day-to-day choices, like what to eat or mode of transportation. Something missing from this conversation is philosophical implication of the very act of blogging—making the unconscious conscious by elevating the personal day-to-day narrative to a place of public interest and importance.

 



[1] “Who Blogs?”

[2] “Mediated Memories” p.273

[3] Mediated Memories” p.267

[4] “Mediated Memories” p.262

[5] “Mediated Memories” p. 263

[6] “Mediated Memories” p.272

[7] Mediated Memories” p.269

[8] “Mediated Memories” p.270

[9] Mediated Memories” p.275

[10] “Mediated Memories” p.268

[11] “Big Long Open Gash” August 17, 2008

[12] “Big Long Open Gash” January 28, 2009

[13] http://www.thesartorialist.com/bio.html

[14] “The Sartorialist” July 20, 2006 http://thesartorialist.blogspot.com/search/label/My%20Favorites

[15] “A Cup of Joe” January 9, 2008 http://joannagoddard.blogspot.com/2009/01/how-to-dress-like-french-woman.html

[16] “Garance Doré” http://www.garancedore.fr/en/a-propos/

[17] “Garance Doré” January 9, 2008 http://www.garancedore.fr/en/2009/01/09/la-femme-francaise/

[18] “Pop Couture”

[19] “Pop Couture”

[20] “The Cherry Blossom Girl” http://www.thecherryblossomgirl.com/about/

[21] “The Cherry Blossom Girl” http://www.thecherryblossomgirl.com/about/

[22] “Interactive Online Journals and Individualization”

[23] “Interactive Online Journals and Individualization”

[24] Who Blogs? Personality Predictors of Blogging”

[25] “Who Blogs” p.2

[26] “Who Blogs”

[27] “Who Blogs?” p.9

[28] “Who Blogs?” p.9

[29] “Who Blogs?” p.9-10

[30] “Culture in the Age of Blogging”

[31] http://www.artsjournal.com/aboutlastnight/

[32] “Mediated Memories” p.275