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In today's digital world our social interactions often take place in the form of written comments. We chat, disagree, worship, vent, confess, and even attack in written form in public digital spaces. Drawing on scholarly literature from media and cultural studies, psychology and sociology, Uncovering Commenting Culture charts this commenting territory and outlines why we behave in these ways online. In this timely book, Renee Barnes provides a participatory model for understanding commenting culture that is based on the premise that our behaviours online-including those that cause us most the concern-are not so much an internet problem as a social problem. By looking at a wide variety of online commenting habitats, from the comment threads following news stories, through to specialist forums and social media platforms, the volume provides a comprehensive understanding of the role of online commenting in society and provides suggestions for how we might mitigate bad behaviours.
List of contents
Chapter 1. Hitch Up the Wagon: Charting the Online Commenting Landscape.- Chapter 2. You Either Love It or You Hate It! The Emotional and Affective Factors of Commenting.- Chapter 3. The Online/Offline Life.- Chapter 4 .A Neurotic Extravert With a Pinch of Conscientiousness? How Personality Informs Commenting Behaviours.- Chapter 5. Lessons From #Gamergate.- Chapter 6. Conclusion: A Participatory Model for Understanding Commenting Culture.
About the author
Renee Barnes is Senior Lecturer in Journalism at the University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia.
Summary
In today’s digital world our social interactions often take place in the form of written comments. We chat, disagree, worship, vent, confess, and even attack in written form in public digital spaces. Drawing on scholarly literature from media and cultural studies, psychology and sociology, Uncovering Commenting Culture charts this commenting territory and outlines why we behave in these ways online. In this timely book, Renee Barnes provides a participatory model for understanding commenting culture that is based on the premise that our behaviours online–including those that cause us most the concern–are not so much an internet problem as a social problem. By looking at a wide variety of online commenting habitats, from the comment threads following news stories, through to specialist forums and social media platforms, the volume provides a comprehensive understanding of the role of online commenting in society and provides suggestions for how we might mitigate bad behaviours.