THE growing popularity of social networking sites like Facebook, MySpace and Second Life has thrust many of us into a new world where we make “friends” with people we barely know, scrawl messages on each other’s walls and project our identities using totem-like visual symbols.

We’re making up the rules as we go. But is this world as new as it seems?

Academic researchers are starting to examine that question by taking an unusual tack: exploring the parallels between online social networks and tribal societies. In the collective patter of profile-surfing, messaging and “friending,” they see the resurgence of ancient patterns of oral communication.

“Orality is the base of all human experience,” says Lance Strate, a communications professor at Fordham University and devoted MySpace user. He says he is convinced that the popularity of social networks stems from their appeal to deep-seated, prehistoric patterns of human communication. “We evolved with speech,” he says. “We didn’t evolve with writing.”

The growth of social networks — and the Internet as a whole — stems largely from an outpouring of expression that often feels more like “talking” than writing: blog posts, comments, homemade videos and, lately, an outpouring of epigrammatic one-liners broadcast using services like Twitter and Facebook status updates (usually proving Gertrude Stein’s maxim that “literature is not remarks”).

“If you examine the Web through the lens of orality, you can’t help but see it everywhere,” says Irwin Chen, a design instructor at Parsons who is developing a new course to explore the emergence of oral culture online. “Orality is participatory, interactive, communal and focused on the present. The Web is all of these things.”

An early student of electronic orality was the Rev. Walter J. Ong, a professor at St. Louis University and student of Marshall McLuhan who coined the term “secondary orality” in 1982 to describe the tendency of electronic media to echo the cadences of earlier oral cultures. The work of Father Ong, who died in 2003, seems especially prescient in light of the social-networking phenomenon. “Oral communication,” as he put it, “unites people in groups.”

In other words, oral culture means more than just talking. There are subtler —and perhaps more important — social dynamics at work.

Read more…

Electracy was accepted as a term in Wikipedia in October 2006 ( see History). Since its inclusion it has been dogged by controversy. It seems that you can rename plantets and make up new terms for molecules but you just can’t mess with the language when it comes to matters of literacy. The article has again recently been tagged with the suggestion that it be merged into information and media literacy“.

Greg Ulmer’s response? ” Oh no! This would be ironic, given my vituperative fulminations against “media literacy” as a phrase and concept. At least this round they’re not saying “delete.” Meanwhile, why not fold the literacy” entry into the “orality” one?”

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electracy

If you missed class this week you missed out on selecting a term from the glossary list for the first assignment. The assignment outline is here: http://www.swin.edu.au/sbs/media/netlit/glossary.doc

Please email Lisa to be assigned a term if you don’t already have one.  The full list of who is doing what will be posted here shortly.

Here are some interesting sites for you to visit

Beehive

Archiving Imagination

thebluedot

The Electronic Writing Ensemble

mark amerika’s filmtext

This blog will bring together teaching resources and student blogs for the subject Network Literacies taught at Swinburne University in Melbourne in semester 1 2008.

The class is being taught by Lisa Gye and Boo Chapple.

And for those nervous technophobes enrolled in the subject, consider the following!

And for the social butterflies among you …

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