blogs
world blog day
0A second post for today because I forgot about this.
Tomorrow is World Blog Day. Seek out someone new and from a different culture than your own. Make new friends, learn about new customs.
In the spirit of World Blog Day, they make these suggestions:
In one long moment In August 31st, bloggers from all over the world will post a recommendation of 5 new Blogs, Preferably, Blogs different from their own culture, point of view and attitude. On this day, blog surfers will find themselves leaping and discovering new, unknown Blogs, celebrating the discovery of new people and new bloggers.
BlogDay posting instructions:
1. Find 5 new Blogs that you find interesting
2. Notify the 5 bloggers that you are recommending on them on BlogDay 2005
3. Write a short description of the Blogs and place a a link to the recommended Blogs
4. Post the BlogDay Post (on August 31st) and
5. Add the BlogDay tag using this link: http://technorati.com/tag/BlogDay2006 and a link to BlogDay web site at http://www.blogday.org
world blog day
0Tomorrow is World Blog Day. On WordPress, this should be fairly easy. Click to the next blog and seek out someone new and from a different culture than your own. Make new friends, learn about new customs.
In the spirit of World Blog Day, they make these suggestions:
In one long moment In August 31st, bloggers from all over the world will post a recommendation of 5 new Blogs, Preferably, Blogs different from their own culture, point of view and attitude. On this day, blog surfers will find themselves leaping and discovering new, unknown Blogs, celebrating the discovery of new people and new bloggers.
BlogDay posting instructions:
1. Find 5 new Blogs that you find interesting
2. Notify the 5 bloggers that you are recommending on them on BlogDay 2005
3. Write a short description of the Blogs and place a a link to the recommended Blogs
4. Post the BlogDay Post (on August 31st) and
5. Add the BlogDay tag using this link: http://technorati.com/tag/BlogDay2006 and a link to BlogDay web site at http://www.blogday.org
lorelle on wordpress
0
Lorelle on WordPress is one of those rare sites where someone (in this case, Lorelle VanFossen) has decided to give and not ask much of the readers of the site. In fact, if altruistic can define a blogger, Lorelle would definitely have that label applied. She is helpful and insightful and full of great information on how to get the most out of your WordPress blog.
As a long-time subscriber to Lorelle’s blog (but a very rare respondent – count that as one lone comment), I have found many great ideas and suggestions from Lorelle’s blog.
She is currently celebrating the one year anniversary of WordPress.com. During the celebration, she has been reviewing the best of the best of what is WordPress. For instance, recent posts have included WordPress plug-ins, Choosing a WordPress Theme, and Helping WordPress Users.
One of my favorite recurring themes in Lorelle’s site is the Blogging Challenge. Lorelle challenges fellow bloggers to expand their presence, their input, and their communal selves.
Lorelle writes in a friendly, open style. There is nothing condescending or overly technical in her advice. She gives information in terms that are easy to understand and follow.
A+
(image from lorelle on wordpress)
wired
0In the interesting news department, the Center for Citizen Media: Blog has posted Hype versus Reality.
They cover that age-old (okay, months old, maybe – but that’s ages in internet time) question of who visits blogs and social software sites. A few of their findings:
- mostly young and male, especially those who visit technology-related sites
- very active in their use of the sites
- looking for “a fix of unique, informative fun†and “filling in the blanks†left by traditional news sources
- sharing what they know
- looking for and finding multiple perspectives
Hmmm.
Where does that leave the rest of us?
We’re chopped liver, I guess.
Blech.
‘net neutrality
0I’ve been thinking about this topic for a while. I’ve been thinking about the impact it will have on all of us – not least of all bloggers, especially those big bloggers that draw in a lot of traffic, who may have a message different from the one their service providers agree with, and who are willing to speak out about the injustices they see in the world.
I finally decided to write about it when I read the feministing interview with Joan Blades of MoveOn.org.
The time to take action is now. Congress is meeting tomorrow to discuss this issue. Read the feministing article. Then go to save the internet and send your representative a message.
We need to make sure that our representatives know that the Internet needs to be neutral. No one should be treated unfairly.
keyword: social
0Yesterday, on my main blog, I wrote about the Daily Kos issue with the Observer.
Daily Kos recently shared an article in which the UK newspaper, Observer, stated (emphasis mine),
For many, they are the nerds of US politics: laptop warriors, with brains full of statistics, no social life and devoting too much time to arcane policy details.
Okay, what is it about social software that mainstream media does not get? It’s incredibly social. If the reporter had even ventured into the Daily Kos and read the comments, he would have seen a thriving, interested, and engaged community – which cannot be said for many offline communities.
What is this social thing? I don’t know about you but I love to get comments. I like to hear what other people have to say about what I write. I like to comment back to them and agree or disagree or set the record straight or expand on it. I like engaging people. That’s half the reason I write. I want to know what people are thinking.
I also like how small the world becomes when you blog. When people from all over the U.S. comment, it’s cool. When people from other countries around the world comment, that is amazing.
Blogs are tools that connect us.
I think it’s important for people to really understand what social networking is and what kinds of communities are built through social software like blogs, wikis, del.icio.us, flickr, or frappr.
Blogs can be anything the writer decides it to be. It can be a personal journal (although, the personal part of it is somewhat removed since it’s no longer that lock & key diary if it’s a true blog). It can be a developmental log. It can be a way to share information with like-minded community members. It is a chronological, frequency-based account. If you write it multiple times a day, daily, weekly, monthly, or even yearly, it’s still chronological.
So, what does this have to do with social networking? It’s all about the comments and the ways blogs are designed. Take WordPress, for example. Inside the dashboard of the blog, they have links to other blogs. They show who is publishing what, when, and where. They share information. They share links to new themes or plug-ins or information that will be important to fellow bloggers. People then go to the links, make comments, leave feedback, leave their URLs and a connection is made.
What is really important is that in a community like Daily Kos, people are actually connected in a real and emotional way. During the YearlyKos, one member of the dKos administrative team lost his house to a drunk driver. The driver actually drove into the house. What is worse, is that the driver drove into the baby’s room. Had the administrator not been at YearlyKos, his family could have been killed. The readers of dKos rallied around him. They sent messages. They sent money. They sent condolences, support, and empathy. They reached out, as a community, to take care of one of their own.
How often can we say that about the neighborhoods that we live in?
keyword: social
0
Daily Kos recently shared an article in which the UK newspaper, Observer, stated (emphasis mine),
For many, they are the nerds of US politics: laptop warriors, with brains full of statistics, no social life and devoting too much time to arcane policy details.
Okay, what is it about social software that mainstream media does not get? It’s incredibly social. If the reporter had even ventured into the Daily Kos and read the comments, he would have seen a thriving, interested, and engaged community – which cannot be said for many offline communities.
What is this social thing? I don’t know about you but I love to get comments. I like to hear what other people have to say about what I write. I like to comment back to them and agree or disagree or set the record straight or expand on it. I like engaging people. That’s half the reason I write. I want to know what people are thinking.
I also like how small the world becomes when you blog. When people from all over the U.S. comment, it’s cool. When people from other countries around the world comment, that is amazing.
Blogs are tools that connect us.
hold the presses
0
A week or two ago I talked about not wanting to turn my blog into this personal journal where I pour out everything that a twelve-year-old (apologies to Erin) would write in her little pink diary with a key.
The reason I wrote that is because I know someone who says that blogs are just personal journals written in a public space as a part of exhibitionism. They are a way to show off and toot our own horns (okay, actually two different people have said this very thing to me).
I heard someone else say something about the “personal diary” type of blogs, as well, just the other day. And I started wondering what the aversion to this type of journaling is.
Who usually writes those kinds of blogs? Is it women?
I’m wondering this because the people who have said that they hate personal blogs were men – very technical men, at that.
In my blog training, I show very different ways of using blogs. I show personal blogs, work blogs, educational blogs, political blogs, and various others.
I think all types of blogs have their place – even those that deal with the very personal issues that we deal with in our every day life.
Maybe a blog is helping someone work through some issues s/he had while a child. Lili talks about her life as a child prostitute. This is an issue that more people should be reading about and discussing. It is highly personal. It is highly relevant.
Erin talks about everything under the sun…politics, movies, work, life, and travel. Today she even talks about school and curses me (hey…I’m just trying to get everyone in the world to join my gang…can’t blame me, can you?).
The point is, personal journals have a place in this world, too. I keep in touch with some of my favorite people by reading their blogs – especially when life gets crazy and we just don’t have the time to send e-mails or snail mails or even pick up a phone. I like that part of social networking. We are making a community.
And if we share a little piece of ourselves in the creation of that community, is that so wrong?
english 520 final project
0This needs a lot more analysis, I realize. It was my first major graduate level paper and it’s something I’ll be working on in my next semester, as well, so it’s still a work in progress.
The Blogosphere: The Rhetorics of a Woman’s Role in Virtual Communities
We are well into the new millennia and the age-old saga continues: the battle of the sexes is alive and well in cyberspace. That vast virtual frontier that was heralded as free and open and available to anyone who wanted to have a space in it is not so free and open, at least not linguistically. Writers on the internet, specifically in weblogs (blogs), must conform to a homogenous linguistic style in order to be accepted and even ranked as a “top blog�?. As Steven Levy, Newsweek technology columnist writes, “These self-generated personal Web sites are supposed to be the ultimate grass-roots phenomenon.�? (Levy) However, women’s blogs are rarely heralded as top ranked or important in the male-dominated blogging hierarchies. If they are considered “good reads,�? they are typically about politics, dating, or sex, a “Sex in the City�? meets “The West Wing�? type of discourse. Write about the things that men want to read about and you’re in. Write about the things that interest other women or are the typical “private sphere�? issues, and you’re likely to have your blog read by your family and friends – and intermittently, at that. In fact, Amanda Marcotte, a blogger, speaks of this issue in Stephanie Schorow’s article, “Broads on Blogs.�? “Women often run up against the attitude, Marcotte remarks, that “guys make the rules and they get to decide the impact of a woman’s issue. Women, for obvious reasons, are going to write about women’s issues more.” (Schorow)
Who Blogs
More importantly, maybe, should be the question, who doesn’t blog? According to Herring, et. al.,
“In the five years since the introduction of the first free web-based blogging tools (Pitas and Blogger; Blood, 2002b), the number of people creating and maintaining blogs has grown exponentially, from fewer than 100 to over four million (Henning, 2003). Anecdotal accounts also suggest that they are diverse: the mainstream media have reported on popular blogs authored by individuals as varied as university adjuncts, dark horse candidates for political office, and a gay Iraqi dissident (McCarthy, 2003). As yet, however, there has been little empirical examination of the claim that blogs are “democratic,�? or that blog authors represent diverse demographic groups.�?
Herring, et. al. make the argument that this free-range frontier, the virtual wild west, has its Wild Bill Hickocks and Buffalo Bill Codys. There are the famous and the infamous in blogging and, by and large, like their 1800s Wild West counterparts, they are men. Herring, et. al, continue,
“An initial consideration of the demographics of blog authors reveals an apparent paradox. Quantitative studies report as many (or more, depending on what one counts as a blog) female as male blog authors, and as many (or more) young people as adults (Henning, 2003; Orlowski, 2003), suggesting a diverse population of bloggers as regards gender and age representation. At the same time, as will be shown, contemporary discourses about weblogs, such as those propagated through the mainstream media, in scholarly communication, and in weblogs themselves, tend to disproportionately feature adult, male bloggers.�?
The real dissonance, therefore, is between the mainstream media and the actual numbers – we think. There is no conclusive evidence on who makes up the demographics of the blogging world nor, I suspect, will there ever be. Much of blogging is done anonymously. Some bloggers pride themselves in crossing gender lines or in portraying themselves as gender-neutral. It is only with those self-reporting bloggers do we have some idea about who is actually blogging.
That being said, there is a general media bias toward a certain demographic of the blogging world. “Media reportage about weblogs, even when ostensibly concerned with the phenomenon of blogging in general, tends to focus on adult male weblog authors.�? (Herring, et. al.)
The Women of Blogging
There are millions of blogs on the internet. Women, men, and children have all gotten into the habit of logging in daily to write about their topic du jour. On the Technorati Top 100 blogs (http://technorati.com/pop/blogs/), the women of blogging have very homogenous voices: political. Save one. Heather B. Hamilton Armstrong, also known to the world of blogging as “Dooce�? is a stay-at-home-mom (SAHM). However, Heather staked her claim to fame by being fired from her position as a web designer for blogging about her work. In 2002, Heather’s coworkers and supervisors found extremely derogatory statements made about them on her blog. On January 17, 2002, Heather writes,
“Ignore the inane string of email from the Vice President of Spin to the Vice President of Enabling His Fist Up Your Ass, cc’d to everyone in the company because, really, what’s a cock fight without an audience? Instant message the only other cool person in the office - the only other person who’s not wearing a belt that matches his shoes – to tell him that Her Wretchedness is once again ordering Prada shoes online and talking about it out loud.�?
(Armstrong)
This entry is a rather mild one in comparison to many of her entries. Heather continues her attacks on March 6, 2002,
“When she talks with her hands she looks like she’s molesting the air around her, sticking her fingers in holes and around forbidden curves. Often the air around her is the air around me, and my air doesn’t appreciate it. She’ll walk from her desk to mine, stand behind my chair and say, “I just thought of something.�? She always says this and wants me to believe that she has really just thought of something.�?
(Armstrong)
Heather writes about her work situation from June 2001 until February of 2002 when she writes, “I lost my job today. My direct boss and the human resources representative pulled me into one of three relatively tiny conference rooms and informed me that The Company no longer had any use for me. Essentially, they explained, they didn’t like what I had expressed on my website. I got fired because of dooce.com.�? (Armstrong) The firing doesn’t stop her from writing negative comments about her former co-workers and supervisors. In fact, she continues, to this day, to write an anniversary entry about the day she got fired. One of the reasons Heather is so popular (number nine on Technorati’s top 100 list), is because she was contacted by the mainstream media regarding her situation. She was well connected throughout the Los Angeles area and made her connections work for her. She was written up in the New York Times, the Washington Post, and linked by several prominent Los Angeles community websites. Reading Heather’s blog today is similar to reading Woman’s Day or Parenting but with more slang and profanity. Heather has a monthly entry that she writes for her daughter, chronicling the things that have changed in the last month. In November, she writes,
“Dear Leta, Today you turn 21 months old. To celebrate we filled a shot glass with apple juice and let you slam it back. Not really, but what I would give to be in the room when my mother reads that. It’s my way of getting back at her for teaching you how to fold your arms and be reverent while someone is praying.�?
(Armstrong)
Heather is still irreverent and sassy. She may write about messy diapers and cleaning up dog vomit and complain about her family members but she does so in a way that amuses her readers.
The other top women of blogging write specifically about the politics of the United States. The Huffington Post (#5), is Arianna Huffington’s entry into the blog world. She has guest writers as well as Associated Press newsfeeds. Huffington, who has been producing this blog since May 9, 2005 (yes, it’s that new!), writes on various topics such as “Katrina Relief: It’s Iraq Déjà vu All Over Again,�? “Bush’s New Plan for Victory: Stop Saying ‘Insurgents’,�? and “The Liberal Love Boat.�? For Huffington, who writes nearly every day and often more than once a day, everyone is fair game. In writing about Bob Woodward’s lack of exposés on the Bush administration, she says, “Some would say it’s because he’s carrying water for the Bushies. I disagree. I think it’s because he’s the dumb blonde of American journalism, so awed by his proximity to power that he buys whatever he’s being sold.�? (Huffington, November 28, 2005) Huffington calls Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger to the mat after his proposition defeat by stating, “And it struck me, isn’t this exactly the way an abuser operates? Bully, browbeat, name-call — to say nothing of spend millions on attack ads — and then desperately try to kiss and make up.�? (Huffington, November 9, 2005)
Huffington is witty and intelligent. She is often the requested pundit when hosts like Bill Maher want someone who is not afraid to speak her mind, no matter who is on the other end. However, I can’t help but notice that she is also playing the political game in quite the same way men do: she calls names, she attacks like a pit bull, and she doesn’t let up. She is playing politics according to the language that has been established by her male counterparts.
Rounding out the women of the Top 10 at Technorati is Michelle Malkin. Malkin, a career news journalist and current commentator for Fox News, writes conservative-centered entries. Malkin writes about Janeane Garofalo, “Janeane Garofalo, left-wing actress-turned-Air America radio host, is a miserable woman. Last week before the holidays, she turned up on cable TV. No, not to count her blessings but to rant against conservative journalist Bob Novak, author Ann Coulter, and the Fox News Channel. She didn’t have anything better to do for Thanksgiving?�? (Malkin, November 30, 2005)
Malkin doesn’t actually write a whole lot in her blog. She allows others to do the research for her and then posts their findings. She will write a short, attacking blurb, “Lots of blog buzz over MoveOn.org’s latest, noxious anti-war propaganda�? and then follows it up with commentary from another site, “Best of the Web reported yesterday on a sharp-eyed Army captain’s reaction to that scene in MoveOn’s fund-raising ploy.�? (Malkin, November 30, 2005)
Malkin, like Huffington, is intelligent and witty and yet still resorts to name calling and finger-pointing. She uses to the same discourse that is heard on the Drudge Report written by Matt Drudge or in Bill O’Reilly’s opinions or in Rush Limbaugh’s commentaries. The message is clear: If you want to be recognized, you must write in the same language that men use. In Justice Interruptus, Nancy Fraser affirms this theory, “The least powerful are faced with cultural and symbolic forms of exclusion such as cultural domination, nonrecognition, and disrespect.�? (Fraser, 13-14) Jacqueline J. Lambiase confirms this sentiment as she recalls the German feminist Christa Wolf’s writings on the mythical figure, Cassandra. “Since Cassandra’s time, Wolf asserts, women compulsively still feel the need “to adapt�? to the patriarchal discourse “or disappear�?, even in the twenty-first century.�? (Lambiase, 111) She continues, “…not only have male voices almost exclusively created the framework of language that gives meaning to information technology, but these same voices also have claimed a disproportionate textual presence through this technology.�? (Lambiase, 112)
The Topics of Blogs
Mommy blogs. Baby blogs. Parent blogs. David Hochman, columnist for The New York Times, writes, “As stomach bugs go, the one that hit the Allen family of Redmond, Wash., this month certainly got a lot of play. Barely an hour after Jaxon, 5, showed his first miserable symptoms, his mother was posting her satirical account of Pukefest 2005 on her Internet blog, Catawampus.�? (Hochman) Blogs that post about every day life (including Armstrong’s Dooce.com which is mentioned in Hochman’s column) are found in abundance on the internet. However, they are treated with some degree of scorn. While Hochman chose to write an entire column on this phenomenon, his second paragraph reads, “The world’s most thankless occupation, parenthood, has never inspired so much copy. For the generation that begat reality television it seems that there is not a tale from the crib (no matter how mundane or scatological) that is unworthy of narration.�? (Hochman)
That private sphere is supposed to be kept private. Emotions, family matters, children’s illnesses are to be kept within the walls of the home life. Alison M. Jaggar writes, “Within the western philosophical tradition, emotions usually have been considered as potentially or actually subversive of knowledge. From Plato until the present, with a few notable exceptions, reason rather than emotion has been regarded as the indispensable faculty for acquiring knowledge.�? (Jaggar, 145) She continues, “Not only has reason been contrasted with emotion, but it has also been associated with the mental, the cultural, the universal, the public, and the male, whereas emotion has been associated with the irrational, the physical, the natural, the particular, the private, and, of course, the female.�? (Jaggar, 145) Women write about what they enjoy. They write about the subjects they know. They write in a voice that gives them status within their communities; communities frequently devoid of men. These voices are often filled with emotion, speak of the private, and are, largely, female. Tenn, a SAHM, writes,
“During some recent web surfing in the blogosphere I noticed a disturbing trend. I noticed that while political blogs are getting lots of attention due to the bloggers at the convention it has led to some downsides as well. I have read many “Why can’t it be me” or “I’m just a mom” or “My blog is boring” comments. That saddens me – because we may be mothers and we may be blogging about our children and our daily lives but that does not make a “mommy blog” insignificant. On the contrary some of the most inspiring blogs I have read have been written by other homeschooling mothers.�?
(Tenn)
A Sense of Community
Tenn points out, indirectly, one of the draws of the blogging world: community. Tenn has connected with other mothers who, like her, are homeschooling mothers. The sense of community, the sense of having a kindred spirit, if online, is one that draws the typical blogger back again and again. Sibylle Gruber writes, “Supporters of virtual communities have argued that cyberspace moves beyond the restrictions of face-to-face communities and creates opportunities for communication that do not exist in “real�? space.�? She emphasizes the connection by quoting Derek Foster’s idea of online cohesiveness that is “the subjective criterion of togetherness, a feeling of connectedness that confers a sense of belonging.�? (Gruber, 79) In a world where neighbors seem farther away and where interpersonal connections are increasingly difficult to make, the online blogging community is a place to meet others who have the same interests or same concerns.
Anita Blanchard, in trying to understand the need for online communities, defines their importance as two-fold.
“First, virtual communities are considered important for social reasons. As CMC [computer-mediated communication] groups initially became popular, community activists argued that they would help replace the relationships lost as people became more isolated from their neighbors (Rheingold, 1993; Schuler, 1996). Some researchers even argued that virtual communities could allow people to connect with others from around the world who share similar interests (Wellman & Guilia, 1999) This would not necessarily create a global village, but it would expand a person’s village around the globe (Hampton & Wellman, 2001). As people became more connected with others through these virtual communities, they would reap the benefits of social relationships with like minded others.
A second, more practical, reason for the importance of virtual communities relates to the CMC group’s sustainability. The term “community�? implies an emotionally positive effect to which even critics of the use of the term agree (Harris, 1999). Information science professionals and psychologists argue that this positive emotion creates an intrinsically rewarding reason to continue participation in the group (Kuo, 2003; Whitworth & De Moor, 2003). When participants experience feelings of community, they are more likely to increase or maintain their participation in the virtual communities.�?
(Blanchard)
Democratizing Blogging
What is the issue in blogging? Are women really being blocked from recognition by the mainstream media or other men or is it because they write about life outside of politics and are not the witty pundits that make for good sound bites?
The truth of the matter is that women are frequently silenced in male-dominated societies. The technology world, and the internet in particular, have long been the domains of men. Cheris Kramarae writes,
“Women (and members of other subordinate groups) are not as free or as able as men are to say what they wish, when and where they wish, because the words and the norms for their use have been formulated by the dominant group, men. So women cannot as easily or as directly articulate their experiences as men can. Women’s perceptions differ from those of men because women’s subordination means they experience life differently. However, the words and norms for speaking are not generated from or fitted to women’s experiences. Women are thus “muted.�? Their talk is often not considered of much value by men – who are, or appear to be, deaf and blind to much of women’s experiences. Words constantly ignored may eventually come to be unspoken and perhaps even unthought.�? (19)
Why are women muted? Why might men feel that their discourse was not as important as a more male-centric discourse? Kramarae writes,
“The public areas of life – and public discourse – in most societies appear to be controlled by males. The work, interests, and talk of women are not considered as important to men as men’s own work, interests, and talk. Women do, of course, speak. However, in public discourse especially, “the appropriate language registers often seem to have been ‘encoded’ by males, [and thus] women may be at a disadvantage when wishing to express matters of peculiar concern to them.�? Unless their views are presented in a form acceptable to men, and to women brought up in the male idiom, they will not be given a proper hearing. (S. Ardener, 1975).�? (20)
Paula Span reiterates this (but in a more enjoyable fashion) when she writes,
“As for cyberspace…no one’s hung a “No Girls Allowed�? sign on the door. It’s often a male clubhouse nonetheless, one girls can enter provided they are willing and able to scramble through the briers, shinny up the tree, ignore the skinned knees and announce that they can spit a watermelon seed just as far as the guys inside can. Figuratively speaking.�? (410)
But is it really the language that is keeping women from enjoying the same popularity as men or is it something else? Can we blame all of the blogging world’s seemingly sexist viewpoint on the differences of language and how men and women relate to one another’s discourse?
Herring, et. al. claim that it really may be the way blogging “favorites�? are chosen and how the system works rather than any single group of people trying to suppress the voices of other groups.
“Blog authors themselves contribute unwittingly to creating a hierarchy within the blogosphere with adult males at the top. They do this by linking to “A-list�? blogs, which tend overwhelmingly to be filter-type blogs created by men, thereby contributing to these blogs’ perceived popularity and status. The “A-list�? blogs, in turn, link mostly to other men’s blogs: in a count of links from the blogrolls of the top ten blogs (as determined by number of incoming links), Ratliff (2003) found that only 16% led to sites of female bloggers. As we have seen, men are more likely than women or teens to comment in their own blogs on political issues. They are also more likely to post entries to public-access group sites such as Metafilter (cf. Krishnamurthy, 2002). Thus male blogs are more likely to be very popular (where popularity is defined in terms of number of incoming links), and males are more likely to frequent popular blogs. To the extent that those who write about blogs focus on those that are most popular or otherwise have the highest public profile, the tendency for men to be featured is partially explained.
This leads to the question of what defines a blog. Is it the listing of ideas and links to other sites on a webpage (the basic definition of a filter weblog)? Or is it the daily entry of anything and everything, depending on the blogger’s choice of topics. Herring, et. al. contend that those who first called themselves bloggers, those who write filter blogs, do not consider the daily journal-type entries “blogs.�?
Bloggers … are presumably not intending to exclude women and youth from the definition of blogging. Rather, they are defining the weblog based on their own activities and those of the people they know, and extrapolating back in time to the antecedents of those activities. In so doing, however, they overlook an important phenomenon that predates [the] first filter, and in which women and teens play a central role: the online journal.�?
In fact, “From the outset, online journals, like the tradition of hand-written diaries they draw from, have been associated with women (McNeil, 2003). Flynn (2003) describes the rise of online communities of women journaling about weight loss, illness, pregnancy, child rearing, and other topics of special concern. Women (and men) also journal about events in their everyday lives.�? (Herring, et. al.)
In all fairness, even journalists, scholars, and the blogging community as a whole are not trying to marginalize women and their private-made-public discourse. Herring, et. al, sum it up well when they state, “participants in such discourses do not appear to be seeking consciously to marginalize females and youth. Rather, journalists are following “newsworthy�? events, scholars are orienting to the practices of the communities under investigation, bloggers are linking to popular sites, and blog historians are recounting what they know from first-hand experience.�?
These actions have the unfortunate outcome of marginalizing a selected group of bloggers and promoting the notion that the male blogger’s voice is the voice of reason, of authority, and of importance. Only when the issues that are important to mainstream women become “newsworthy�? or hold scholarship merit among academicians, will women’s voices in weblogs be equal to men’s.
That time seems to be a long way off.
Works Cited
Armstrong, Heather B. Dooce.com (2005): November 23, 2005 .
Blanchard, Anita. Blogs as Virtual Communities: Identifying a Sense of Community in the Julie/Julia Project. Into the Blogosphere: Rhetoric, Community, and Culture of Weblogs (2004): November 23, 2005
Fraser, Nancy. Justice Interruptus: Critical Reflections on the “Postsocialist�? Condition. New York: Routledge, 1997.
Gruber, Sibylle. The Rhetorics of Three Women Activist Groups on the Web: Building and Transforming Communities. Alternative Rhetorics. ed. Laura Gray-Rosendale and Sibylle Gruber. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2001. 77-92.
Herring, Susan C., Inna Kouper, Lois Ann Scheidt, and Elijah L. Wright. Women and Children Last: The Discursive Construction of Weblogs. Into the Blogosphere: Rhetoric, Community, and Culture of Weblogs (2004): November 23, 2005
Hochman, David. Mommy (and Me). The New York Times. January 30 (2005): November 23, 2005
Huffington, Arianna. The Huffington Post (2005): November 28, 2005
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blogging and identity
0I am working on my master’s degree in literacy, technology, and professional writing at northern arizona university. This blog will be my approach to those studies, a legacy of my findings, and my journey through the process.
The area I’m concentrating on is gender, identity, and blogging. What is it about blogging that creates identity and is it specific to gender?
The posts may be sparse from time to time as I work on my studies but I will be posting my progress as I can.

