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Have you seen this video? One of the most popular on the web, it’s earned over 9,000,000 views since first posted last year (even topping Super Bowl commercials aired the same week)!

In the five minute clip Michael Wesch, a professor of anthropology at Kansas State University, shows how digital text has redefined the medium of text as a whole, and its connection to underlying ideas and content. Pretty heavy stuff--it certainly makes you ponder. Frankly, I think it’s one of the most powerful shorts I have seen on any topic!

Last night, I went to a lecture in which Wesch presented on the anthropology of YouTube. Last semester, he enlisted students to conduct an ethnography of the YouTube community, which he perceives as a unique forum for users to exercise their fundamental right to free speech and creativity by sharing content and opinions with others around the world. Innovations like super easy-to-use hyperlinking and video uploading tools have opened this space to a wide range of people, beyond just the tech geeks active on the internet in its Web 1.0 infancy.

Fascinating! At the conclusion of the lecture, someone in the audience questioned whether voicing opinions on YouTube is really a different phenomenon from the Hyde Park Soapbox forums of the 19th century. Quite a provocative analogy!

I would argue that YouTube is not fundamentally different from Hyde Park, or Times Square, or any other forum in which “undiscovered” individuals can communicate with large groups of people. There are, however, a few minor distinctions. Some relate to the internet as a medium that provides even more anonymity than a public park in a big city. Those who might not be disposed to get on a soapbox in Hyde Park, or heckle someone on a soapbox for that matter, might feel more comfortable joining the conversation on YouTube.

The other major distinction is geographic scale. You can reach many more people from many more locations in the world on YouTube than in Hyde Park. In one example, Wesch described how users attempting to learn a foreign language often videotape themselves speaking the new language, and then post to get feedback from native speakers. Pretty cool.

I’ve commented before about the internet as a democratizing force and medium for global communication, and asked how you use the internet to learn about and interact with people around the world. My question to you now is related, but more theoretical:

Does communicating via the internet make geographic factors more or less salient?
That is, do you find yourself forgetting about differences of culture and location when interacting with friends on the internet? Or do you think about these differences even more?


Sarah for My Wonderful World


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