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Reassessing the theorisation of community experience within the digitally mediated, global context

conference contribution
posted on 2011-01-01, 00:00 authored by Alexia Maddox, Brad Warren
This paper argues that the changing environment in which community experience occurs requires re-theorisation within the digitally mediated, global context. A range of work has certainly emerged addressing this, but there is more to be done, including tracing a theoretical lineage of community studies.

Beginning with the early Chicago School, community was described as geographically bounded. Decades later, community experience meditated by digital technology has been commonly understood to be about virtual community. Ironically, many virtual community scholars have perpetuated the Chicago School perspective in examinations of online groupings, the only difference being that such ‘boundedness’ now referred to relatively fixed locations in cyberspace.

As an emerging alternative, a parallel range of literature has focused upon the immersion of ICT-mediated social relations into everyday life. It is argued that Wellman’s networked individualism provides a way to integrate the online/offline mediated social experience, however it is not a sufficiently complete metaphor to describe spatially distributed, mediated community experiences. From the work of Robert Park, a member of the early Chicago School, the idea of the social ‘ecology’ of place can be adapted to provide a connecting thread into digitally mediated ecologies of community experience. 

In this paper it will be demonstrated that understandings of contemporary community are enhanced, not through abandoning each theory of (virtual) community in favour of the next, but through the consideration of related bodies of work in light of one another, and through the incorporation of enduring aspects of preceding theories into current formulations to enhance understanding.

History

Event

Australian Sociological Association. Conference (2011 : Newcastle, N.S.W.)

Pagination

2 - 20

Publisher

TASA

Location

Newcastle, N.S.W.

Place of publication

Hawthorn, Vic.

Start date

2011-11-28

End date

2011-12-01

ISBN-13

9780646567792

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1.1 Full written paper - refereed

Editor/Contributor(s)

S Threadgold, E Kirby, J Germov

Title of proceedings

TASA 2011 : Local lives/global networks : Proceedings of The Australian Sociological Association 2011 conference

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