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Audrey B

What Would Martin Luther King Make of Twitter? | VF Daily | Vanity Fair ... - 0 views

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    Baratunde Thurston imagines how the civil rights leader would have expressed himself in 140 characters. It is interesting to see that MLK was a reader and follower of Thoreau's essay "Civil Disobedience". There is civil disobedience going on all across the web. Was Thoreau also a precursor for an influx of electronic civil opposition?
Chris Anderson

BBC News - Pakistan blocks access to YouTube in internet crackdown - 0 views

  • For Muslims, directly insulting the sacred is beyond petty 'freedom of speech' privileges we mortals have. In the West, people think arrogantly that they are free to say anything without limits whatsoever, no matter how ridiculous or insulting.
    • Chris Anderson
       
      It's interesting how (having the ability to freely post their opinions on the issue) people in these comments are showing how they have no concept of the purpose of free speech that we are used to.
jardinejn

Radio's America: The Great Depression and the Rise of Modern Mass Culture by Bruce Lent... - 0 views

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    This shows how people viewed relatively unfamiliar mediums of communication back in the Depression and I think makes some relevant points on how the relationship of the masses with the new media can either forcast or reflect cultural values of the time.
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    This shows how people viewed relatively unfamiliar mediums of communication back in the Depression and I think makes some relevant points on how the relationship of the masses with the new media can either forcast or reflect cultural values of the time.
Gideon Burton

My Arabic Mission: "Something there is that doesn't love a wall" - 0 views

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    An interesting example of a photo essay post from a student abroad. Note the thematic continuity across the pictures and in relation to the interspersed poem.
Audrey B

Iran Elections: A Twitter Revolution? - washingtonpost.com - 0 views

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    Evgeny Morozov, a blogger for Foreign Policy magazine and a fellow with the Open Society Institute, discusses the role of Twitter and other social-networking services during the Iranian elections.
Krista S

The 4 C's of Catalytic Connections - 0 views

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    Don't just talk about yourself, talk about the world and show that you're listening.
Gideon Burton

educationalsoftware - Online tools - 0 views

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    A good list of online tools (by category)
Audrey B

Digital Activism in Iran: Beyond the Headlines | DigiActive.org - 0 views

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    This is great. Digital Activism and I'm writing on Electronic Civil Disobedience. I like it.
Heather D

Digital Natives » Identity - 0 views

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    Blog about social media and identity. Comments on trend toward unifying identity and the related problems. Also talks about online anonymity.
jardinejn

Stuart Moulthrop - You Say You Want a Revolution? Hypertext and the Laws of Media - Pos... - 0 views

  • . But
  • But
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  • Stoll excoriates "cyberpunks," virtual vandals who abuse the openness of scientific computing environments. Their unsportsmanlike conduct spoils the information game, necessitating cumbersome restrictions on the free flow of data.
  • Orthodox McLuhanite doctrine holds that "every form, pushed to the limit of its potential, reverses its characteristics" (Laws of Media viii).
  • Who decides what information "belongs" to whom? Stoll's "popular elite" is restricted to academic scientists, a version of "the people" as nomenklatura, those whose need to know is defined by their professional affiliation.
  • The telos of the electronic society-of-text is anarchy in its true sense: local autonomy based on consensus, limited by a relentless disintegration of global authority. Since information is now virtually an equivalent of capital, and since textuality is our most powerful way of shaping information, it follows that Xanadu might indeed change the world.
  • Electronic information, as Stoll sees it, lies in strict analogy with material and private property.
  •   "Cyberspace. A consensual hallucination experienced daily by billions of legitimate operators, in every nation... A graphic representation of data abstracted from the banks of every computer in the human system" (Gibson 51).
  • The vision of Xanadu as cyberspatial New Jerusalem is conceivable and perhaps eligible, but by no stretch of the imagination is it inevitable.
  • But it seems equally possible that our engagement with interactive media will follow the path of reaction, not revolution
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    Pros and Cons of the newly evolving concept of networking information back in the early 90s
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    Some interesting questions and speculations about potential controls on media from an early 90s perspective
Amanda Giles

The Multitasking Generation -- Printout -- TIME - 0 views

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    They're e-mailing, IMing and downloading while writing the history essay. What is all that digital juggling doing to kids' brains and their family life?
Ben M

New Mormon.org - 0 views

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    mormon.org with individual profiles
Ben M

Feminist Mormon Housewives » The Bloggernacle Scares Me - 0 views

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    post about what type of community the bloggernacle is and what kind of "rhetorical space" it is
Bri Zabriskie

Zotero | Home - 0 views

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    A free, easy-to-use Firefox extension to help you collect, manage, cite, and share your research sources.
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    this would've been so useful in the past
Amanda Giles

Keeping True Identity Online Becomes Battle - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • But in this more narcissistic Internet era, people who were once happily anonymous view themselves as online minicelebrities with their own brands to promote.
  • vanity addresses
  • accounts on sites like Twitter and Facebook tend to show up at the top of the list when people search the Web
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  • his is a new world that we are having to step into in order to protect our brand, and they did not give us a huge window of time to prepare for it
Neal C

Want Smart Kids? Here's What to Do - Percolator - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

shared by Neal C on 28 May 10 - Cached
  • Thus it seems that scholarly culture, and the taste for books that it brings, flows from generation to generation largely of its own accord, little affected by education, occupational status, or other aspects of class
    • Neal C
       
      Books matter...physical, tangible things
  • I wonder what e-book readers like the Kindle will mean to these statistics. On the plus side, a lot of e-books are free and those that aren't are often discounted, so a family with a Kindle might be able to afford more books (assuming they can pony up for the device). But the books aren't as easy to share and you probably don't want your 5-year-old dribbling juice onto your fancy expensive gadget.
    • Neal C
       
      Does online competency indicate to children the same priority on education or scholarship?
  • Want Smart Kids? Here's What to Do Buy a lot of books.
    • Neal C
       
      Want smart kids? Get books, not the internet (at least until someone does a similar study on the internet).
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  • onducted over 20 years, in 27 countries, and surveyed more than 70,000 people. Resea
becca_hay

The Effects of Family and Community Violence on Children - Annual Review of Psychology,... - 0 views

  • Children are potentially quite vulnerable to the effects of violence because violence exposure may alter the timing of typical developmental trajectories (Boney-McCoy & Finkelhor 1995). That is, violence initially may result in primary effects, such as anxiety, depression, or PTSD symptoms, which cause secondary reactions by disrupting children’s progression through age-appropriate developmental tasks. For example, exposure to violence in young children can result in regressive symptoms, such as increased bedwetting, decreased verbalization, or separation anxiety (Osofsky 1995). These symptoms secondarily may affect children’s socialization skills or ability to concentrate in school. Moreover, at a time when children may have difficulty with typical developmental tasks, exposure to violence can result in having to acknowledge and cope with adult issues. As Garbarino and colleagues note, “in Western culture, childhood is regarded as a period of special protection and rights” (1992:1). The home and the neighborhood, generally considered the primary safe havens for the child, lose those protective and comforting qualities in the aftermath of family or neighborhood violence
becca_hay

193031_759372088_789375107.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

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    Great article concerning adolescent identity online.
Amanda Giles

The will to technology and the ... - Google Books - 0 views

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    Heidegger, Nietzche, and Marx seem to be the best psychological/philosophical sources for defining identity in the light of social media advances. I haven't worked through this whole article, but it seems like a good source for quotes on identity that can say whatever you want them to mean, you know?
Ben M

147-28-36.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

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    sunstone-bloggernacle
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