How blogging is changing the academia and why I want to see more scholars blogging

Saturday, January 24, 2009

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Most of all I prefer to blog about ... life. The research of one kind or another is slowly creeping into the posts of this blog, again, mostly mish-mashed with daily observations and discoveries. Once again, to quote T. Nelson, we live in the media like fish live in the water... However, I am not going back to blogging my routine - the mention of my blogging preferences is a conscious digression.

A few days ago, as I was walking towards a copy machine in our library (aka an ever continuing building site), I bumped into a student whom I have met during one the seminars I am attending. As far as I remember, she is studying either literature or philosophy. I had mentioned to her previously that along with a few other enthusiasts I launched free movie screenings for Research master students in Utrecht University. She asked me where could she find the information on the films we are watching. 'On the blog', I replied. 'Where?' she inquired. 'On the blog', I repeated again. Judging by the expression on her face I realised that she did not have much to do with blogs until now and, most probably, much encounter should not be expected in the near future. I scribbled the web address in her notebook and told her to look it up.

About two months ago I started spreading a suggestion around other media students I am studying with to start a group research blog on new media. The definitions of the term in this case are not that relevant, but I was thinking that instead of distributing ourselves into the vast plateaus of media (theatre, television, performance) and trying to kill too many birds with one blog we might be better off focusing on the fields where traditional media intersect with the new and where the new media is defining itself.

I must say, I had hard time convincing why we should blog our academic research. Some imagined a research blog as a type of a pin up board, where we would post our papers. In other words, instead of seeing it as a lab where ideas are being born, nurtured, amended and moulded, more than a few imagined it as a digital repository of our final products, be they papers, articles or theses.

One of my greatest discoveries since I started my studies in Utrecht has been the scale of blogging academia (since I was writing different kind of blogs previously, my familiarity with more or less academic blogs was less). On the other hand, one of the greatest disappointments I still encounter is the scale of non-blogging academia. I suppose, the situation is similar to media theorists as Geert Lovink or Matthew Fuller tend to divide them: there are those who converse on new media without bothering to surf, blog, tag and ultimately to log in, and there are those who are in the media - by participating and launching various projects and trying to situate themselves in the current developments of the field as they happen.

'In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries science became too technical and mathematical for the philosophers, or anyone else except a few specialists. Philosophers reduced the scope of their inquiries so much that Wittgenstein, the most famous philosopher of this century, said, 'The sole remaining task of for philosophy is the analysis of language'. (Hawking, 1988) I could not agree with Steven Hawking more. To paraphrase, I could also point out that the developments introduced with the age of personal computer have snowballed the accumulation of information and knowledge. Accordingly, keeping in pace with these developments has become even more demanding, while in my personal belief, keeping the finger on the pulse of the planet we live in is the ultimate task of a scholar.

A blogging scholar - regardless of whether one is a student or a professor with all necessary insignia - in a way is a stripped down scholar. Her postulates might not necessarily be complete and varnished. They might be undercooked and even raw. Underdeveloped like a film roll. Too young like a bottle of wine that was opened too early. However, the beauty of thought lies in its capability to evolve. Watching a movie by a particular director is one thing, but gradually introducing oneself to her whole oeuvre and being able to observe how the vision and the content is developing is completely another. Same applies to music and books, and numerous other forms in which we express our understanding of the world.

Blogging has fundamentally changed our interaction with the internet and each other. Currently, according to Technorati, there are 133 million of them. Which means that almost every tenth Internet user is writing one. Of course, in a way this brings us to the era where potentially we might have more writers than readers.

Nevertheless, I know this is not the case with my university. As far as I know, including me three out of my 14 Media and Performance students blog (I've just unexpectedly discovered one of those three tonight and I am happy as a child who has just crawled into a new playpen). In this case I do not make a distinction between a research and a non-research blog. Either way, blogs ultimately reflect what we contemplate on, discover and experience, while teaching us to put our thoughts into writing.

Blogs are still breaking the waves in my native Lithuania, while research blogs or blogs written by members of academia are particularly scarce. At least among the professors here, in Utrecht, the situation sometimes reminds Norshteynian fog. I hope it clears away gradually. Some professors whose lectures I have attended (luckily, not those I meet and work with on a daily basis) would definitely clear the fog in their heads if they started blogging on a regular basis. Same applies to students.

I would love to see some changes. Information overload? I don't think we have seen it among blogging scholars yet. Bring them on: those unpolished arguments, spontaneous thoughts, unfinished etudes and unrefined paragraphs. The beauty lies in the maturation and the possibility to savour it gradually.
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Lina

2 Responses to "How blogging is changing the academia and why I want to see more scholars blogging"

FyMi said :
February 10, 2009 at 2:32 PM
Lina, I so much agree with you about this.
That's why I recently launched my artexperience blog: freyabeleeft.blogspot.com
Unfortunatly it is writen in dutch, so it will be hard to share it with you. But I might find time to translate in German and English.

For me this is not an exibishionistic personal diary or fullfilling the need to express.

It is an experiment to see if it works as a method to come to deeper insights, without following conservative scholarly methods (i.e. reading the leading papers, summarizing, and writing a piece that fits in the puzzle).

Last but not least, as you mention, the personal aspect plays a crucial role. It brings us to the border between personal and academic writing. I think we should cross this border constantly, to find unexpected and inspiring new ways, connections. Furthermore, if you are clear about your personal passion for a certain topic, the reader will much easier identify, understand and keeps following your writing for you as a person. After all plain text is meaningless and powerless, if we don't see the person and motivation behind it.
Fabrizio said :
March 9, 2009 at 1:19 PM
you should say things to Nicholas Carr: he thinks the blogosphere is dead.
see
http://www.roughtype.com/archives/2008/11/who_killed_the.php

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