Locating the Australian Blogosphere: Towards a New Research Methodology
(2008) Locating the Australian Blogosphere: Towards a New Research Methodology. In Proceedings ISEA 2008: International Symposium on Electronic Arts, Singapore.
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Abstract
Much has been written about the potential impact of the blogosphere on future patterns of global, national, and local public communication; blogs and other forms of distributed, networked, non-mass mediated discussion and engagement may fundamentally reconfigure the conventional model of the public sphere as it was formulated by Habermas and others during the second half of the past century. However, for all the anticipation of a networked society to come, there is as yet little more than speculation about the shape of the future mediasphere, and the impact of blogs is often still documented by anecdotal evidence rather than thorough study. An increasing number of researchers have begun to examine the internal structures of the blogosphere, however, both in terms of its demographics (see e.g. Rainie, 2005) and in terms of the topical fields and genres now emerging (see e.g. Bruns & Jacobs, eds., 2006). Additionally, the increasingly distinct blogging practices within specific national, ethnic, and subcultural communities are attracting growing attention (see e.g. Russell & Echchaibi, 2008), and the trajectories of bloggers through the blogosphere over time are beginning to be traced (Kirchhoff, Bruns, & Nicolai, 2007). Major national and international events provide an important opportunity to study uses of blogs and document their impact on domestic and global publics. The role of blogs in covering the events of 9/11, the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, or the 7 July 2005 bombings in London has been well-noted; news and political blogs have also become increasingly instrumental in local and national election campaigns. Our project aims to develop a rigorous and sound methodology for the study of this networked public sphere: using a mixture of quantitative analysis, data visualisation, and qualitative evaluation which builds on emerging blog network mapping tools (see Bruns, 2007), it aims to locate the key nodes in the Australian political blogosphere, examine their role as opinion leaders for the networked public in Australia, and investigate the interrelationship between the political blogosphere and the wider Australian mediasphere.
| Item Type: | Conference Paper |
|---|---|
| Status: | Unpublished |
| Keywords: | network, mapping, blogs, blogosphere, public sphere, Leximancer, VOSON |
| Subjects: | 400000 Journalism, Librarianship and Curatorial Studies > 400100 Journalism, Communication and Media > 400104 Communication and Media Studies 420000 Language and Culture > 420300 Cultural Studies 280000 Information, Computing and Communication Sciences > 280100 Information Systems > 280111 Conceptual Modelling 280000 Information, Computing and Communication Sciences > 280100 Information Systems > 280107 Global Information Systems |
| ID Code: | 13427 |
| Deposited By: | Bruns, Axel |
| Deposited On: | 02 May 2008 |
| Alternative Locations: | http://www.isea2008.org/page/1/ |
| Copyright Owner: | Copyright 2008 (please consult author) |
| Additional Information: | This is the full version of the paper; a condensed version will be published in the conference proceedings. |
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