"Hashtags as Spectacle: #bostonstrong and The Materiality of Metadata" (EGSA #spect2014 Conference)
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Transcript of "Hashtags as Spectacle: #bostonstrong and The Materiality of Metadata" (EGSA #spect2014 Conference)
#Hashtags as #Spectacle#BostonStrong
andThe Materiality of Metadata
Jim McGrath, Northeastern University Twitter: @JimMc_Grath
EGSA Conference (The Spectacular!)Northeastern University (March 29th, 2014)
“Information overload might not have increased the rate at which disasters occur, but it has exponentially increased the rate at which they’re witnessed.”
Douglas Rushkoff, Present Shock (2013)
April 15th, 2013 (4:12pm)
(View Tweet on Twitter)
#BostonTearParty
#sportscry
#prayforboston
“Digital Dualism” (Nathan Jurgenson, 2011)
“Digital dualists believe that the digital world is “virtual” and the physical world “real.” This bias motivates many of the critiques of sites like Facebook and the rest of the social web…”
“…the digital and physical are increasingly meshed, and [I] want to call this opposite perspective that implodes atoms and bits rather than holding them conceptually separate augmented reality.”
“Digital Dualism” (Nathan Jurgenson, 2011)
#bostonstrong
(Source: Twitter via WEEI)
(Source: Twitter)
The #Origin of #Hashtags on #Twitter
(October 2007)
(Source: Chris Messina’s Blog [FactoryCity])
The #Origin of #Hashtags on#Twitter
(October 2007)
“I’m more interested in simply having a better eavesdropping experience on Twitter.”
(Source: Chris Messina’s Blog [FactoryCity])
The #Origin of #Hashtags on#Twitter
(October 2007)
• easy to learn• flexible• “folksonomic”
(Source: Chris Messina’s Blog [FactoryCity])
“Unlike traditional tagging systems used for information archival, Twitter hashtags can serve either as a label for identifying topically relevant streams of message or a prompt for commenting and sharing.“
“Hashtags often fill a dual role as both a topical identifier (e.g., #iPhone) and a symbol of a community membership (e.g., #VoteForObama).”
#Hashtags
(Source:Lin et al) [#BigBirds])
#Hashtags
“[A] hashtag’s publicity and legitimacy is driven by social exposure as part of a process of complex contagion: hashtags grow because they are adopted by users with social connections to one another, and by users’ repeated use and spreading the word to others of interests.”
(Source: Lin et al [#BigBirds])
Twitter and The 2013 Boston Marathon Bombings
(Source: Rogers; Twitter’s Media Blog)
Twitter and the 2013 Boston Marathon Bombings
(Source: Rogers; Twitter’s Media Blog)
#bostonstrong
(Source: Twitter via WEEI)
“We focus on the emergent use of hashtags #prayforboston and #bostonstrong. “
“The first hashtag #prayforboston became popular immediately after the bombings, used by both Boston and non-Boston users, to send comfort messages to Bostonians.”
“The second hashtag #bostonstrong was populated two days after and gained its highest popularity around April 20 due to the “Boston Strong” community events. This hashtag reflects a sense of community identity of Bostonians.”
(Source: Lin [2014])
#prayforboston and #bostonstrong
“Outside Boston, the level of interests for Twitter users in expressing comfort (in terms of #prayforboston volume) and community identity (in terms of #bostonstrong volume) vary with cities. The hashtag #prayforboston had a wider reach than the hashtag #bostonstrong – among the 25 cities considered in this analysis, #prayforboston appeared in 23 cities, while #bostonstrong only appeared in 17 cities.”
(Source: Lin [2014])
“Similar to the detected fear, the use of the two hashtags exhibit a ripple effect corresponding to the geographical proximity of cities…"
(Source: Lin [2014])
What does #bostonstrong mean to users?
"We developed Boston Strong off of Livestrong and Army Strong, because it was something simple people could get behind."
(Source: WEEI)
What does #bostonstrong mean to users?
"It was something my dad had always said along the way with his dealings with the Boston people and the salesmen. It was always Boston Strong this, and Boston Strong that. I remember that from my dad, and it just seemed to fit in that situation. That’s why I put the tweet out.”
(Source: WEEI)
"I just thought it was a takeoff on the Livestrong [Lance Armstrong's foundation]," Clough said. "But for me, this was my dad's thing. To me it was more family and personal more than anything else."
What does #bostonstrong mean to Twitter users?
(Source: WEEI)
“From the 1980s concept of cyberspace to 1990s software such as Netscape Navigator, interacting with computerize data and mediahas been consistently framed in spatial terms…Thus, “navigating the Internet” includes following hyperlinks, using
menus commonly provided by Web sites, as well as using search engines.”
(Source: Manovich, 2001)
Navigating and Exploring the Web at The End of the 20th Century
Web browsers in the 1990s (Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator)
Metaphors and mechanisms that privilege “a single user navigatingthrough web sites rather than more communal experiences, such asnewsgroups, mailing lists, text-based chat…”
“a single user navigating through an unknown territory rather thana member of a group, even if this group is a crowd of strangers.”
(Source: Manovich 2001)
(Source: Watchmen)
(Source: Miroshnichenko. 2013)
The fundamental difference between the Viral Editor and the brain is that the Viral Editor is capable of capturing his own historical states, which make up his unique, archival memory, and this memory is accessible at any point in time and from any point in time.
(Source: Miroshnichenko. 2013)
#Hashtags and their relationship to other modes of writing and circulating content online
• Active engagement vs. Passive consumption • (the limits of this binary)• How we use media / how media is changing• Uses in the construction of public identities• Communal dimension of hashtags• Archival implications• Potential for researchers
#Thanks#nofilter
Works Cited
Bradford, Rob. “The Birth of ‘Boston Strong’: How A Father’s Message Led to a Historic Slogan.” WEEI. 2014
Jurgenson, Nathan. “Digital Dualism and The Fallacy of Web Objectivity.” Cyborgology Post, 2011
Lin, Yu-Ru. “The Ripples of Fear, Comfort, and Community Identity During the Boston Bombings.” 2014.
Lin, Yu-Ru et al. “#BigBirds Never Die: Understanding Social Dynamic of Emergent Hashtags.” 2013
Manovich, Lev. The Language of New Media. 2001
Miroshnichenko, Andrey. Man as Media: The Emancipation of Authorship. 2013.
Messina, Chris. “Groups for Twitter; or, A Proposal for Twitter Tag Channels.” 2007.
Our Marathon: The Boston Bombing Digital Archive
Rogers, Simon. “The Boston Bombing: How journalists used Twitter to tell the story.” Twitter Media Blog. 2013
Rushkoff, Douglas. Present Shock: When Everything Happens Now. 2013.