This book examines everyday stories of personal experience that
are published online in contemporary forms of social media. Taking
examples from discussion boards, blogs, social network sites,
microblogging sites, wikis, collaborative and participatory
storytelling projects, Ruth Page explores how new and existing
narrative genres are being (re)shaped in different online contexts.
The book shows how the characteristics of social media, which
emphasize recency, interpersonal connection and mobile
distribution, amplify or reverse different aspects of canonical
storytelling. The new storytelling patterns which emerge provide a
fresh perspective on some of the key concepts in narrative
research: structure, evaluation and the location of speaker and
audience in time and space. The online stories are profoundly
social in nature, and perform important identity work for their
tellers as they interact with their audiences - identities which
range from celebrities in Twitter, cancer survivors in the
blogosphere to creative writers convening storytelling projects or
local histories.
Stories and Social Media brings together the stories told in
well-known sites like Facebook and lesser-known community archives,
providing a landmark survey and critique of personal storytelling
as it is being reworked online at the start of the 21st
century.
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