In the attempt of grasping what is distinctively social in what we are now used to call 'social media', the risk is to chance upon a circular tautology. Social media are commonly defined as a group of Internet-based technologies that facilitate social interactions between people by allowing to keep or further enlarge pre-existing social networks and to create and exchange user-generated content across variously articulated audiences (boyd, Ellison, 2007). Differently from mainstream media as print, radio and television, social media are characterized by their potential for many-to-many communication, which means that they draw on and feed into networks that can have the shape of both one-to-one and one-to-many exchanges (Jensen, Helles, 2011). This chapter will offer an explanation of the social in social media by arguing that the communicative practices that feed into them are not only new modes of communication but more deeply constitute new hermeneutic frames for intersubjectivity. The argument will be supported by the idea that technologies on which social media are based are sense-making objects that realize a symbolic re-coding of the intersubjective bases of lifeworld.

(2017). Communication . Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10446/161973

Communication

Murru, Maria Francesca
2017-01-01

Abstract

In the attempt of grasping what is distinctively social in what we are now used to call 'social media', the risk is to chance upon a circular tautology. Social media are commonly defined as a group of Internet-based technologies that facilitate social interactions between people by allowing to keep or further enlarge pre-existing social networks and to create and exchange user-generated content across variously articulated audiences (boyd, Ellison, 2007). Differently from mainstream media as print, radio and television, social media are characterized by their potential for many-to-many communication, which means that they draw on and feed into networks that can have the shape of both one-to-one and one-to-many exchanges (Jensen, Helles, 2011). This chapter will offer an explanation of the social in social media by arguing that the communicative practices that feed into them are not only new modes of communication but more deeply constitute new hermeneutic frames for intersubjectivity. The argument will be supported by the idea that technologies on which social media are based are sense-making objects that realize a symbolic re-coding of the intersubjective bases of lifeworld.
scientifica
Inglese
2017
Theorising Sociology in the Digital Society
Lombi, Linda; Marzulli, Michele
online
9788891751188
1
12
Italy
Milano
Franco Angeli
esperti anonimi
Settore SPS/08 - Sociologia dei Processi Culturali e Comunicativi
social media; presecing; self-representation
indice consultabile alla pagina https://www.francoangeli.it/Ricerca/scheda_libro.aspx?Id=23972
info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
(2017). Communication . Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10446/161973
reserved
1.2 Contributi in volume - Book chapters::1.2.01 Contributi in volume (Capitoli o Saggi) - Book Chapters/Essays
Non definito
Murru, Maria Francesca
1
268
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