This article examines the understandings and meanings of personal information sharing online using a predominantly symbolic interactionist analytic perspective and focusing on writers’ conceptions of their relationships with their audiences. It draws on an analysis of in-depth interviews with 23 personal bloggers. They were found to have limited interest in gathering information about their audiences, appearing to assume that readers are sympathetic. A comprehensive and grounded typology of imagined relationships with audiences was devised. Although their blogs were all public, some interviewees appeared to frame their blogging practice as primarily self-directed, with their potential audiences playing a marginal role. These factor...
textA blog webring is a self-organized online network that bloggers can join based on its thematic d...
The purpose of the current paper is to develop a theoretical model that identifies why people blog p...
In this paper, we aim to study virtual presence in blogging communities. We argue that though some c...
This thesis examines the understandings and meanings of personal blogging from the perspective of bl...
When people construct and share posts on social network sites like Facebook and Twitter, whom do the...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityDisclosure of personal stories and self-relevant emotions is an ess...
This study explored why individuals write personal blogs and the influences of blogging on their liv...
Our means of online communication have shifted over the decades—from email to instant messaging to s...
Social blogs and social blogging are terms used to describe second-generation Internet publish tools...
Blogging has often been described as writing an online diary but, nowadays, it is more diverse and a...
This work describes a qualitative research, still in progress, about blogging. This experience is fu...
Blurring boundaries between producers and audiences are widely acknowledged (Bruns, 2005; Jenkins, 2...
Erving Goffman is an important sociologist whose dramaturgical perspective on social interaction and...
Objective: The objective of this study is to understand and explain the phenomenon of self-presenta...
This study asks whether users’ encounter with normative discourses of lifestyle, consumption, and he...
textA blog webring is a self-organized online network that bloggers can join based on its thematic d...
The purpose of the current paper is to develop a theoretical model that identifies why people blog p...
In this paper, we aim to study virtual presence in blogging communities. We argue that though some c...
This thesis examines the understandings and meanings of personal blogging from the perspective of bl...
When people construct and share posts on social network sites like Facebook and Twitter, whom do the...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityDisclosure of personal stories and self-relevant emotions is an ess...
This study explored why individuals write personal blogs and the influences of blogging on their liv...
Our means of online communication have shifted over the decades—from email to instant messaging to s...
Social blogs and social blogging are terms used to describe second-generation Internet publish tools...
Blogging has often been described as writing an online diary but, nowadays, it is more diverse and a...
This work describes a qualitative research, still in progress, about blogging. This experience is fu...
Blurring boundaries between producers and audiences are widely acknowledged (Bruns, 2005; Jenkins, 2...
Erving Goffman is an important sociologist whose dramaturgical perspective on social interaction and...
Objective: The objective of this study is to understand and explain the phenomenon of self-presenta...
This study asks whether users’ encounter with normative discourses of lifestyle, consumption, and he...
textA blog webring is a self-organized online network that bloggers can join based on its thematic d...
The purpose of the current paper is to develop a theoretical model that identifies why people blog p...
In this paper, we aim to study virtual presence in blogging communities. We argue that though some c...