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Theorizing the Web 2016 Keynotes

Hey ITP,

The two keynote panels last night were very interesting in light of a number of our conversations about the possibilities and pitfalls of digital interactivity. The first panel (I think it’s called Cool Story) assembles several authors investigating representational possibilities of the internet and the use of the internet as content generation vs. regurgitation, also the difficulties of representing the internet in other media. The second panel (which starts at about 1hr 45 min) concerns the virality of evil on the internet and includes a presentation by ITP guest Jade Davis!

http://livestream.com/ttwconference/redstone/videos/119830402

I cannot recommend these panels enough!

Looking forward to conversation tomorrow.

-Jojo

Hope Labor – The Hunger Artist

While today is not my turn to post, and I hope that I am not enroaching on the other folks, I had a sudden reaction to the peice about Wikipedia editing.

The concept of Hope Labor was really interesting, and quite different than the gift economy that was covered in the other articles. I found it especially pertinent to our discussion about the labor that we do in academia. We left off the conversation last week talking about the publish or perish imperative that drives the academic labor economy. In our PhD suits we have to play a very particular and strategic game in which niche-ing our scholarship is crucial to the cut-throat odds against tenure-track positions in the evolving adjunctification of higher education. At the precipice of any kind of access to the jobs that reward the 5-something years of Doctoral work is an almost frantic focus on positioning ourselves for access through publication. This is certainly a an economy of hope labor that drives many of the relations and hierarchies within academia. But it also reminds me of my work as an adjunct. I never attended an adjunct appreciation event at any of the colleges I labored because the veneer of appreciation for our ingenuity and dedication to teaching masks a more exploitative system that expects educators to act as starving artists- not as professionals but as folks who do it for the love of it. That is not to negate any passion that anyone has for teaching and learning, but to resist the idea that the joy of teaching is payment enough. Institutions that service marginalized students especially try to tug at the heart-strings by clouding the reality of what is going on by thanking you for your “dedication”.

 

How will Open Access change the academy?

As we have discussed open access resources in both semesters of the program, I have been pondering how educators who seek the professoriate will prepare ourselves differently in order to enter the academy. Much importance has been placed on publishing and ownership of  materials and the academy seems to be somewhat reluctant to make a concerted effort to switch. Those of us who are thinking of open source as a positive movement still seem like interlopers

I am just starting to understand the ways in which this softening of the lines may help me to work and publish. I am wondering whether the shift to open source digital authorship will happen in a way that will help or hurt those seeking entrance during the shift. Once the shift happens, those coming behind it will be fine but there are those in power who are a bit behind the divide. Where do they stand on seeing open source as a viable road to authorship?  It represents in my opinion a real paradigm shift  for the powers that be in the preparation for entry into higher education. It is hard to know in the next 5 years what that shift will look like.

Motivation:

1) What are some of the ways in which Open source authorship will change the rigor of preparing for the professoriate?

2) Will open source allow for better access to higher levels of academe or will the perceived threat disallow for serious use in prestigious journals?

 

 

Teaching the non-traditional way

Sorry for the lateness. We do Easter in a big way at my house.

I have been pondering the intersection between pedagogy and technology  for quite a while. Long before I started my doctoral studies I noticed that students were using technology socially  but as per the Department of Education were forbidden to use their technology in the classrooms. I started thinking then about all of the ways that I observed them using their technology and how I could use my observations to create solid learning experiences as well as alternative modes of assessments that spoke to the subject matter although they were non-traditional. Now, my work in induction mirrors that goal as I prepare teachers for the classroom using the same methods. This week’s readings touch on the place where the creation of assignments and the use of technology meet.

Jade Davis illustrates for us how the clear structure of her projects help students with process oriented thinking as well as her clear goals and check points keeps student on track. The structure of her projects create strong communication between her and her students and help to facilitate student voice as well. I agree with her assertion that her assignment structure is nearly fool proof if her students follow her instructions. If they don’t her check point catch wayward students and put them on track.

Matt Barton speaks about the suspicion with which his colleagues view wikipedia, imagining it to be an unsupervised landscape where anyone can write anything unchecked and calling into question the validity of the information found there.  He spoke of  the inclusive nature of wikipedia calling it neutral but I am not so sure I agree with his or Lessig’s assertions that this is so.

Like Davis, Barton, and Konieczny, I think that Wikipedia can open up new ways to examine pedagogy. It adds a n element of collaboration and ownership that a lot of students don’t usually have. It can also bring a global focus to their work that is usually missing from assignments. I am constantly surprised that more programs don’t use wiki or other technology platforms in their classes.

Motivations:

  1. What do you think are some of the impediments to using Wikipedia and other technological platforms for assignments in the classroom?
  2. How can we truly make the wiki space more inclusive? There are a few voices that are underrepresented due to both content and knowledge base.

Theorizing the Web, April 15&16, 2016

Hi friends!

I just remembered that I had really loved this conference last year, so I looked it up and wanted to see who would join me this year! I haven’t looked at the program yet (it just went up), but I figured I would let you all know sooner rather than later.

http://theorizingtheweb.tumblr.com/2016/program

ACHIM IS PRESENTING!

Now that I have seen that, we MUST go. 🙂

Always down to talk about what’s being talked about.

Jojo

On The One Hand Anyone Can Edit, On The Other Hand Anyone Can Edit

My interest in Wikipedia is truly growing, to my own surprise. The series of articles about Wikipedia assigned this week further contextualize/illuminate this growing interest in the medium-platform-community that is Wikipedia. Most people that I know believe that Wikipedia is not a good source of information or knowledge because it is TOO democratic, TOO open, and teachers + professors always caution against its use in academic work. I’ve never held this belief strictly, but I also did not realize that behind the front-end of a page is a back-end where information and knowledge are critically negotiated, contested and mediated by a diverse (?) community of people who spend unpaid time building the informationscape in piecemeal.

What quickly came to the forefront for me is the problem of the shape and color of that landscape, as well as the diversity of the community that constructs it. Specifically, while barriers to entry to Wikipedia as a contributor/editor is theoretically low, the space is still predominantly white and male. As such, the informationscape tends to reflect that, and emerges as a reflection of the power dynamics within a larger social context. This is one entry into the conversation about why edit on Wikipedia.

The precursor to this conversation is to contextualize Wikipedia within a political economy of ideas and principals about who we are as a society. The issue of democracy, openness and value/validity is essential to theorizing this space in relation to our conceptualization of civil society. It isn’t an accident that resistance to Wikipedia often comes in the forms mentioned above (ie. that it is overly democratic, overly open and not a great source for information). With relation to democracy and openness I will make the argument that mainstream social values, relations and practices are actually not built on democratic principles or principals of openness as one might venture to think within the parameters of discourse around American civil society. Our legal system and constitutional infrastructure is built on principals of individuality and private property as shaped by political modernity. Encoded into our subject-position in relation to the law and to ideologies of citizenship is the idea of a sovereign self and the sanctity of private property. What that looks like in reality is far from this blanket statement I’ve made. We are not all positioned, from the get-go, as equals. Some sovereignties are protected more than that of others, and are conceptualized by different terms (think of same-sex relationships, alternative family structures, immigration regulations, criminality etc). However, the concept of a ‘free’ individual and private property are basic elements/components of how we organize ourselves in the social-political-economic sphere for better or for worse. For example, the values and social system as they relate to community organization and land use for Native Americans were not conceptualized and constituted in the same way that they were for the settlers. However, we now know whose conceptualization of communal/social organization and land/property prevailed. While this seems like an antiquated example (and I am sure there are more contemporary examples to engage), it most starkly highlights the point that the concept of private property and individuality became coded into our legal, political and social institutions over time. This code privileges one group over another, one ideology over another, and essentially one way of being over the other. Principals held by Native Americans were displaced by Settler principals and became the foundation of our legal and our social and economic institutions.

Therefore, it is quite understandable to perceive something like Wikipedia as too democratic and too open. It operationalizes concepts that are ubiquitous in rhetoric but missing from the actual practices of the nation, both on legal-institutional levels as well as the cultural forms that develop around them. I argue then that Wikipedia resists and challenges our basic ideologies about how society and citizenship works, and tests how democratic principles and openness (open and free to utilize and or participate) would look like. As some of the examples from the readings demonstrate (Hurricane Sandy, Gamegate etc), these ideals are not entirely ideal, even or clean cut. Democracy in action turns out to be a contested space that is messy and ridden with power and hierarchy, but also a space that is open to and inviting of a (re)negotiation of those things.

It is only fitting then that negotiation happens around information. The Wikipedia project can then be conceptualized as an epistemic struggle; a political and ontological activity in shaping what we know, and how we know it. The issue of validity and value are especially pertinent in this case. Academia has largely functioned as an institution that acts as the arbiter/gate-keeper and producer of knowledge (within a particular sphere that is distinct from the media or think tanks, both that may have a more direct relationship to public policy but for the sake of the argument we shall leave this aside for now). Academic institutions self-validate through constructing an economy of value and validity about truth claims that are engaged in questions and concerns around methodology, source and disciplinary codes of conduct. Epistomology becomes the domain of a few specialized spaces where the construction and circulation of knowledge is managed, policed and guarded. These spaces are also largely homogenous. Academic institutions encode within their practices a self-referential mechanism where only the knowledge produced within their own domain is valuable and valid. While Wikepedia does  not move too far from this model (that is its concern with methodology, source and codes of conduct) it is though more open (accessible to greater amounts of people as participants and as users). Again, this statement is an over-generalization that too conveniently places these spaces in a binary. But there is some truth to it. The fact is that authentic participation and co-construction of knowledge challenges an institution like academia in similar ways that I’ve asserted that it challenges principals of private property and individuality.

Against this brief and brutish backdrop, I return to the conversation on why edit on Wikipedia?

 

 

 

 

Intersectionality or Bust

Kimberle Crenshaw coined the term “intersectionality” in 1989. But before there was a word for it, women of color have juggled aspects of identity that remain steeped in oppression due to a misogynist, white supremacist society (and dare I say, world). While Betty Friedan wrote about “the problem with no name”, Black and Brown women were raising white children and cleaning the houses of whites. That book was not meant for them. The rallies and marches that followed were not meant for them.  Crenshaw later dubbed the term “interlocking” oppressions to describe the nexus of racial, class and gendered oppressions; the same horrid trifecta that Black women have dealt with since slavery.

These were just some of my thoughts as I read the article “Hashtag Feminism…”. Loza thoroughly excavates the reasons for and against hashtag feminism in general as well as the viral hashtag “Solidarityisforwhitewomen” particularly. The power of the hashtag lies with the ability for users to share experiences and call out hypocritical practices in real time. My only critique of the hashtag is that it conflates ‘solidarity’ with ‘feminism’. Kendall is really saying that feminism as it currently operates mostly benefits white women. It was for this reason that Alice Walker created the term womanism; as it was another attempt to bring the margin to the center.

Speaking of the margins, people of color have never been appreciated for the work we produce. We are overwhelmed with labor for which we are not paid. And yet, the expectation remains that we will work for “exposure” or out of the goodness of our hearts. This holds especially true if one is a woman of color. Dr. Lee’s story in Scientific American underscores this. Would Ofeke have dared to call a man or a white woman an “urban whore”? Dr. Lee’s choice to publish the emails and video response allowed her to simultaneously shame Ofeke, but more importantly, give sound advice to those who may find themselves in similar situations. Our time and energy is limited. Our skills are important and the use of them is worth compensation. Since when has anyone been able to pay bills with “exposure” and the promise of future goodwill? Also, slavery is over. And Black women are entitled to anger when insulted, caricatures and racist stereotypes aside.

Questions:

What are your thoughts of and/or experiences with hashtag activism?

In what ways can we work together to create true solidarity for the purposes of authentic equity?

In what ways can this week’s readings serve us pedagogically?