Monday, April 18, 2011

Political activism


“Neda Agha-Soltan and a few close friends headed toward the center of Tehran, Iran, in June 2009 to join thousands of others in an anti-government protest following the disputed presidential election. After becoming stuck in traffic, Agha-Soltan and her friends eventually decided to exit the car to cool off. As she stepped out and gazed at the crowd, the sound of a gunshot rang through the air. A single bullet was fired, and she fell to the ground.”
“Bystanders captured her last moments on a cell phone, and within hours the grainy, low-resolution footage was uploaded to the Internet and soon spread virally across the globe. With links to the video posted on YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter, the amateur clip eventually harnessed the attention of the mainstream media, grabbing headlines on CNN and in the New York Times.”
“Agha-Soltan’s death became a symbol for the Iranian anti-government movement, and online social media amplified that symbol for the rest of the world to see.”(1)

Above: We Are All Khaled Said Facebook page

Above: Movements.org website



Political uprisings are not new, nor are they unique, or a recent global development. For centuries, as long as there have been political despots, tyrannical rulers, military rule or simply un-democratic or corrupt governments; there have been people unjustly suppressed and unhappy with those in charge. Right back to the times of the Roman Empire and its self-proclaimed Emperor Julius Caesar,  there were uprisings and rebellions in almost every territory under Roman rule because its people felt that they were unjustly ruled or that those in charge did not have the right to do so. 
Of course, in an era of total military rule and suppression, these uprisings were swiftly dealt with by many means to ensure Rome’s political image, as an empire remained intact. Brute force and military suppression meant that dis-satisfied parties were kept scattered and disconnected from each other, so as to avoid cooperation between groups and long-term resistance.



Today, these same techniques have been attempted by ruling governments and leaders, who fail to acknowledge the worldwide and unrestricted cooperation between these same groups. 20th century inventions such as the printing press and the telephone, allowed communication between individuals and groups on a wider scale than before., with newspapers and direct spoken contact allowing news to be spread around the world. These same new communication tools were at the same time, introduced and maintained by those in charge and as such could be filtered and monitored of information at odds with a countries administration.




In recent years, with the introduction and widespread use of the Internet as an everyday tool throughout the world, new tools have become available to groups who wish to make changes to their country at its highest levels. Recent online innovations such as email, blogging and video chat, as well as social networks including Facebook and Twitter, have boosted worldwide communication to astronomical scale. Instant messaging, image and video uploads combined with the connectivity of social networks, allows individuals to get information out to as many people as possible and as far reaching as possible. Had Twitter been available in the time of the Roman Empire, things would have been drastically different.




Essentially, I believe that the recent events of uprisings in Tunisia, Egypt and now Libya, are not the result of social networking; but instead events, which have drastically benefited from recent innovations and popular social tools such as social networks, blog's and video uploading sites like YouTube, combined together to create a wide network of information, which has made great use of the tools at hand and created and strong, worldwide, public consciousness. As such, in the space of just four months, several governments have either fallen or been deposed and many more are to follow. In contrast to uprisings in years past, the concentration and effectiveness of recent events have shown how the tools of today can shape the world of tomorrow,. For better or for worse, we have yet to see.


“This is the first revolution that has been catapulted onto a global stage and transformed by social media,” (Shirky, C)(2)





(1)  Ramtin Amin, Master in Public Policy student at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University where he concentrates in international and global affairs.
Found at:


(2)  Clay Shirky, “Q&A with Clay Shirky on Twitter and Iran”, TED blog.
Found at:
http://blog.ted.com/2009/06/16/qa_with_clay_sh/We Are All Khaled Said Facebook page

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Moral Panics and Social Media



What is a 'Moral Panic'?



A moral Panic by definition is “the intensity of feeling expressed in a population about an issue that appears to threaten the social order”. According to Stanley Cohen, a moral panic occurs when "condition, episode, person or group of persons emerges to become defined as a threat to societal values and interests." Witch-hunts, McCarthyist in the US during the 1950s, jewish hatred during WW2 and fear of Muslims after the attacks of 9/11 in the US are all referred to as moral panics.



 


Moral Panic in Social Networking

Most recently, with the explosion of technology and more importantly, the internet as a tool becoming more common in everyday life in the developed world, social networking sites such as Facebook, Bebo and MySpace have become the hubs of modern social circles, sources of news for young generations and a meeting place for friends and family. These hubs of social activity continue to become more and more important to younger generations and the places where they ‘need to be’ in order to maintain a social status among friends and keep updated in a rapidly moving, online world today. This stress of importance on the need for inclusion in social networking, is in turn pressuring younger and younger generations into taking part in by opening there own online accounts and uploading their own content for their friends to see.

This exposure of young teenagers and children on social networking sites, which themselves promote an open and carefree atmosphere, is quite often abused or misused by individuals, resulting in the most common issues of ‘Cyberbullying’ or ‘sexual predators’ online.



Cyberbullying



Essentially cyberbullying is:

“the use of information and communication technologies to support deliberate, repeated, and hostile behavior by an individual or group, that is intended to harm others. -Bill Belsey"

“According to a 2005 survey by the National Children's Home charity and Tesco Mobile[14] of 770 youth between the ages of 11 and 19, 20% of respondents revealed that they had been bullied via electronic means. Almost three-quarters (73%) stated that they knew the bully, while 26% stated that the offender was a stranger. 10% of responders indicated that another person has taken a picture and/or video of them via a cellular phone camera, consequently making them feel uncomfortable, embarrassed, or threatened. Many youths are not comfortable telling an authority figure about their cyber-bullying victimization for fear their access to technology will be taken from them; while 24% and 14% told a parent or teacher respectively, 28% did not tell anyone while 41% told a friend.”
(Wikipedia, 2011)



In September 2006, ABC News reported on a survey prepared by I-Safe.Org. This 2004 survey of 1,500 students between grades 4-8 reported:
·      42% of kids have been bullied while online. One in four have had it happen more than once.
·      35% of kids have been threatened online. Nearly one in five had had it happen more than once.
·      21% of kids have received mean or threatening e-mails or other messages.
·      58% of kids admit someone has said mean or hurtful things to them online. More than four out of ten say it has happened more than once.
58% have not told their parents or an adult about something mean or hurtful that happened to them online.
(Wikipedia, 2011)

As it has become more common in society, particularly among young people, legislation and awareness campaigns have arisen to combat it. These have taken on the form of online campaigns and websites promoting the proper and fair use of content online and the treatment of others online. For example: webwise.ie, bullying.co.uk and cyberbullingnews.com.



Sexual predators online



The term ‘sexual predator’ is “used pejoratively to describe a person seen as obtaining or trying to obtain sexual contact with another person in a metaphorically "predatory" manner.” In relation to online social networking sites, these individuals misuse the sites to find potential victims and lure them into meeting in person. Most commonly, these individuals portray a false persona online in order to gain enough of their victims trust to meet them in person.
For good reason, this has maintained an on-going moral panic as parents fear for the safety of their children as they may meet strangers online on social networking sites who are communicating with them for malicious purposes. Their have been cases in recent years where children have met someone online who appears to be someone they are not and in some cases, have organized to meet in person, without making their parents of it.
With the escalating fear of online predators, many groups have been organized online to counter predator groups, prevent attacks and provide information to parents on how to protect their children online. Examples of these are: protectkids.com, perverted-justice.com and familywatchdog.us.



Legislation has been passed in several countries in an effort to counter this issue also. For example, in the US:

“The Deleting Online Predators Act (DOPA), introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives in May by Michael Fitzpatrick (R-PA), was passed by a vote of 410 to 15 on July 26. It requires, with few exemptions, that facilities receiving federal aid block minors from accessing commercial social-networking sites and chat rooms, where they might encounter adults seeking sexual contact.”
(Technologyreview.com, 2011)

This kind of legislation, however intended to protect young internet users, may have a negative effect also. On this particular bill it was said:

"If it would actually prevent predation, I would be fine with it," says Danah Boyd, a PhD candidate in the School of Information Management Sciences at the University of California, Berkeley, who is considered one of the leading scholarly authorities on social-networking sites. "But it's not going to help at all. Out of 300,000 child abductions every year, only 12 are by strangers. This is just going to stifle the social-networking industry and completely segment youth around economic status."
(Technologyreview.com, 2011)

As such, it is possible to see that as we strive to place restriction and boundaries to protect the young and keep out the malevolent forces online, we may also be restricting others in the long run, those already finding it hard to get online and meet others in good-will.


(**Images yet to be uploaded**)

Related links:

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Catfish – My little movie review (Spoiler Alert!)




Catfish is a documentary about a man called Nev and his growing relationship with a family through the medium of virtual communication using Facebook and email. It begins with Nev’s interest in the artwork and paintings of Abbey, the families’ youngest daughter and grows as we see Nev fall for the beautiful Megan, Abbeys eldest sister.



I absolutely loved this movie. As a documentary, it was shot very well, using on-the-fly handycams to get in-depth and touching conversations and moments, alongside beautiful location and high energy shots to accompany them. It built up the whole journey of the movie well as we were brought from the early conversations and details between Nev and this family, which then developed into a romantic relationship, which then again became a journey to finally meet the people he knew face to face. The twists, which developed halfway through the piece, I was blown away by, as I actually did not expect events to turn so drastically and again thought that events may turn back again soon after. Also, to finally put the faces and facts together near the end was slightly twisted again as we began to see that there was no malicious intent behind these events but again should act as a warning for how this could of worked out otherwise. Had other forces been in play, things may well of been dangerous.

In relation to culture and society in creative media, I think this documentary is a perfect piece to show how recent social technologies such as Social Networking sites, email and online-chat services can provide people from different parts of the world, with a means of instantaneous and direct communication, no matter the distance. This can lead to close bonds and blossoming relationships between individuals and groups of people where, were the technology not available, these relationships would not of been possible.



On the flip side of this piece however, we see how the convenience and acceptance of these technologies in our everyday lives, has resulted in us leading second lives online where we provide vast amounts of information on our personal lives, free for all to see. With social networking now so heavily embedded in many of our lives today, we allow our lives to be displayed online and in turn become the constant voyeurs of every little detail of others lives online also. This documentary showed perfectly how we accept so much of what is online to be correct and true, that every corner of the internet is safe, and fail to remember that there are those who would use these failings to their own advantage, preying on the open lives found online, where everyone is equal.


Official movie trailer available here:

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Online Contemporary Fans – Science-Fiction Fans

Introduction – “Fandom”

Above: Star Wars fan dressed as Storm Trooper


To explain exactly what a fan or fan base is, I found it difficult to give one singular definition as to be a fan is to be many things, both in practice and association. As such, I found a description given by Henry Jenkins, Director of the MIT Comparative Media Studies Program, who “argues that technology and mass media has moved to a more participatory “convergence” culture” and then goes on to break it down to its main characteristics. In his book Convergence Culture, Jenkins writes that fandom, as displayed within convergence culture, is generally characterized by five things:
  •  Appropriation – A person appropriates in their own life a particular text, work, and practice relating to their fan object. Often these objects are reinterpreted in their own life.
  •  Participation – There is an openness for people to participate at all levels within the community. They are so inspired by it they write music, create events, etc.
  •   Emotional Investment – People become really invested in this object, topics, etc. It is something they are really into and something they want to talk about.
  •  Collective Intelligence (rather than the expert paradigm) – There is room for everyone to have something to say and contribute to the collective understanding of the group. Collective intelligence doesn’t need credentials, degrees, etc., experiences and insights are beneficial to the community and conversation.
  • “Virtual” Community – These are communities that are not necessarily built around face to face meetings. Some of these people know each other and some are unknown, but more often than not these groups will have times to meet face to face.



Science-Fiction Fans

Above: Star Trek and Star Wars fans in costume

Above: Costumed Star Wars fans in parade

Above: Costumed Star Wars fans

Above: Costumed Star Trek fans


Science-Fiction/ Sci-Fi fans consist of individuals who have an active interest all elements of the science-fiction genre. This covers elements such as:

  • Sci-Fi programmes – Such as: Stargate, Star Trek, V, Battlestar Gallactica, Doctor Who, Firefly, etc…
Firefly tv series

Doctor Who meets Star Trek


  • Sci-Fi Movies – Such as: Star Wars series, Alien series, Terminator series, Blade Runner, The Matrix series, Forbidden Planet, 2001: A Space Odyssey, etc…
Blade Runner

Star Wars

The Matrix


  • Sci-Fi games – Such as: Mass Effect series, Half Life series, Halo series, Bioshock, Gears of War series, etc…
Halo & Gears of War

Mass Effect


  • Sci-Fi books/novels – The oldest form of contemporary science fiction, sci-fi books range from Jules Verne’s A Journey to the Centre of the Earth and H.G. Well’s The Time Machine, right up to the more recent of Douglas Adam’s Hitchhikers Guide To The Galaxy and William Gibson’s cyber punk novels.
Above: Popular Sci-Fi novels


  • Comic books – As a source material for all things fantasy, fictional and futuristic, comic books provide story’s in the sci-fi genre while providing the visuals to bring them to life.


They range in extremes from those who buy and read comics as a passing interest, much like reading novels, where individuals may purchase comics from time to time. To those who are fully immersed in the universe of the comics they read. This full immersion can be characterized with the consistent buying of many comics each week (which to others would be financially straining), collecting of character models and action figures (kept in packaging to retain value), bought or self-made character costumes/ Cosplay (usually worn at fan conventions eg: Comic-Con), and fan-made movies modeled on popular pieces of film or tv.

Above: Doctor Who collectables

Above: Stargate collectables

Above: Star Trek collectables

Above: Terminator collectables

Above: Star Wars fan in costume


Fan Conventions - Comic Con







Online Fan-base Communication

As a massive, worldwide fan base, a good communication network is required to provide up-to-date information on the rest of the community as well as important events in the industry. Already there are many fan-specific magazines, such as Sci-Fi Now, SFX, and SyFy, as well as programmes on the tv and other features, all aimed the active Sci-Fi fan. These provide adequate informational supplements each month or week, but fail to be more regular than this. As well as this, society continues to become more fast-paced and ever growing and changing. Along with this, technology adapts and improves, so as to meet the demands of this advancing society, as such, fan-bases adapt and integrate this technology.
In order to keep up to date and informed on events relating to them and to maintain consistent communication within the entire global community, the Internet has rapidly become an essential tool to the continued existence of any fan base today. Online, fanbases can rapidly expand and provide information and assistence on-the-go. This is done through many forms:

  • Forums and chat rooms provide areas where fans can disscuss topics of choice with others, ask questions of their peers, get answers from others, create debates and socialize with like-minded individuals, sometimes longtime relationships are made. Most notably, these areas provide a place where changes can be made to the industry and suggestions made. As fan-feedback becomes more and more important to those in the industry and the success of projects, these fan-forums and chatrooms become more inclusive in the creativity of the industry. An example of this would be a change in a comic-books storyline or the death of a loved character, these would be discussed online through forums and chatrooms where fans voices are heard and suggestions made.

  • Websites aimed at fan-bases or fan-made websites for fans will generally provide equally important information on events and the wider community. Here, pieces of media can be viewed easily and feedback can be given, in turn affecting changes in the industry. Media websites however, will generally take on the form of news outlets and gossip goblins where industry events are leaked before release or on release.


Monday, February 7, 2011

Moral Panic


“A moral panic refers to the reaction of a group of people based on the false belief that another sub-culture or a group poses danger to the society.”(1)

It was Stanley Cohen, in his work, Folk Devils and Moral Panics. (1987) who first coined the term 'moral panics'. He defined the concept as a sporadic episode, which as it occurs, subjects society to bouts of moral panic, or in other terms, worry about the values and principles which society upholds which may be in jeopardy. He describes its characteristics as "a condition, episode, person or group of persons [who] become defined as a threat to societal values and interests." [Cohen, 1987: 9](2)



Cohens work predominantly focused on the Mods and Rockers, the ‘folk devils’, of the 60s and the controversy generated around them as a result of the medias sensationalism of groups which it deemed a deviance and a threat to what Cohen called the ‘control culture’.



"Moral panics then, are those processes whereby members of a society and culture become 'morally sensitized' to the challenges and menaces posed to 'their' accepted values and ways of life, by the activities of groups defined as deviant. The process underscores the importance of the mass media in providing, maintaining and 'policing' the available frameworks and definitions of deviance, which structure both public awareness of, and attitudes towards, social problems." - Key Concepts in Communication (O'Sullivan, Fiske et al 1983) (3)

Throughout history, groups have been victimized under the pressure of authority groups, most recently since the emergence of subcultures such as the Teds of post-ww2 Britian where youths and the middle class began to rebel against the ideals of the upper classes. Such changes in authority and class shifts are always hard to accept and as such, members in authority tend to unfairly demonized such groups as a form of punishment.

“Media coverage is often key to producing moral panic, because certain stories get done to death in the media. This is because the press will tend to latch onto anything of a bizarre nature as more interesting than standard crimes. For instance, a few instances of accusations of Satanism in the 1970s and early 1980s created significant moral panic. Many people truly feared that Satan was being worshipped in just about every town in the US, and that their children would “fall in” with a satanic cult. Though virtually every instance of satanic ritual has been largely discounted after significant investigation, this is still something that concerns many, and their fear grows from an inflated view of the danger.”(4)



These moral panics can quite often be provoked by boredom and the mass media coverage which in many cases can encourage violence or other forms of confrontation or competition by building simple, passive situations into spectacles; in turn feeding media coverage and its need by the public. A perfect example of this was the public confrontations between Mods and Rockers in the 60s. In the beginning, these two differing groups coexisted and socialized in similar areas with little animosity. As these two groups became known and observed by the public, the media began creating a Mod-Rocker polarity, which encouraged violent clashes and forced non-participating teenagers to take sides. 




From here, the media has latched onto sub cultures, taken sparse groups of individuals and provided an ideological framework; thus taking sub cultures mainstream and capitalizing on its coverage. This media coverage and motivation goes on to create a fictional image of these sparse groups in the public as full blown youth movements and therefore a threat to the fabric of our peaceful and structured society. Thus, the presentation of these groups in the media can go on to outrage the wider society and generate a sense of persecution and group solidarity among these sub cultures. Every generation has these, most notably:
  • Mods v Rockers of the 1960s.
  • Skinheads of the 1970s.
  • Punks of the 1970s.
  • Football casuals of the 70s / 80s.
  • New romantics of the 1980s.
  • Goths of the 80s / 90s.
  • Emos of the 90s / 00s.

In worst case scenarios “moral panic may be aimed at a particular group, it can lead to mobs attacking members of that group, or mistakenly attacking people who are supposed members of the group. It has also led to mass killings of people who seem to threaten the very fabric of society. The Salem Witch trials and mass executions, the Crusades, McCarthyism, pogroms, and the Holocaust can all be called moral panics.”(5)





(1)  http://www.iampanicked.com/glossary/moral-panic.htm
(4)  http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-moral-panic.htm
(5)  http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-moral-panic.htm


Video links: 

Mod Vs Rockers:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r61ks18Bd7I

Comics in the 50s:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xr62iKBwQTM

Sex & Violence in games:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JcovxDv8ayQ

Black Flag & Punk Violence:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VFTTE6zbFYU