期刊论文详细信息
Social Media + Society
Social Media and the “Read-Only” Web: Reconfiguring Social Logics and Historical Boundaries:
Megan Sapnar Ankerson1 
关键词: social media;    web history;    web 1.0;    web 2.0;    public;    read-only;   
DOI  :  10.1177/2056305115621935
学科分类:社会科学、人文和艺术(综合)
来源: Sage Journals
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【 摘 要 】

The web’s historical periodization as Web 1.0 (“read-only”) and Web 2.0 (“read/write”) eras continues to hold sway even as the umbrella term “social media” has become the preferred way to talk about today’s ecosystem of connective media. Yet, we have much to gain by not exclusively positing social media platforms as a 21st-century phenomenon. Through case studies of two commercially sponsored web projects from the mid-1990s—Massachusetts Institute of Technology Media Lab’s Day in the Life of Cyberspace and Rick Smolan’s 24 Hours in Cyberspace—this article examines how notions of social and publics were imagined and designed into the web at the start of the dot-com boom. In lieu of a discourse of versions, I draw on Lucy Suchman’s trope of configuration as an analytic tool for rethinking web historiography. By tracing how cultural imaginaries of the Internet as a public space are conjoined with technological artifacts (content management systems, templates, session tracking, and e-commerce platforms) and reconfigured over time, the discourses of “read-only publishing” and the “social media revolution” can be reframed not as exclusively oppositional logics, but rather, as mutually informing the design and development of today’s social, commercial, web.

【 授权许可】

CC BY-NC   

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