59 research outputs found
FĂŁs ou amigos? enxergando a mĂdia social como fazem os mĂșsicos
In the last decade, engaging audiences through social media has become an important element of life as a musician. Tis paper analyses interviews with thirty-six musicians to understand how they perceive their interactions and relationships with audiences online. It highlights the blurred boundaries between fans and friends, identifying how online interactions can bring interpersonal rewards for musicians, as well as how they can raise interpersonal challenges. Musicians balance these tensions through a range of strategies that depend on their need to protect themselves, their loved ones, and the integrity of their fansâ experiences. Rather than approaching online audiences as âfansâ who are necessarily less powerful, many of the musicians engaged them as equals.Na Ășltima dĂ©cada, as audiĂȘncias engajadas atravĂ©s das mĂdias sociais se tornaram um importante elemento na vida dos mĂșsicos. O artigo analisa entrevistas com trinta e seis mĂșsicos para compreender como eles apreendem suas interaçÔes e relaçÔes com audiĂȘncias online. TambĂ©m ressalta os limites incertos entre fĂŁs e amigos, identifcando como interaçÔes online podem trazer recompensas interpessoais para mĂșsicos, assim como gerar desafos interpessoais. MĂșsicos equilibram estas tensĂ”es atravĂ©s de uma gama de estratĂ©gias que dependem da necessidade de protegerem a si mesmos, seus entes queridos e a integridade da experiĂȘncia de seus fĂŁs. Ao invĂ©s de se aproximar da plateia online como fĂŁs que sĂŁo necessariamente menos poderosos, muitos dos mĂșsicos os tratam como iguais
Interpreting Soap Operas and Creating Community: Inside a Computer-Mediated Fan Culture
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The publisher's version is available at http://www.jstor.org/stable/3814314
Internet Research as is Isnât, Is, Could Be, and Should Be
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The publisher's version is available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01972240591007535
The Performance of Humor in Computer-Mediated Communication
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The definitive version is available at www.blackwell-synergy.com.There has been very little work on humor in computer-mediated communication. Indeed, the
implication of some CMC work is that the medium is inhospitable to humor. This essay argues that
humor can be accomplished in CMC and can be critical to creating social meaning on-line. The humor of
the Usenet newsgroup rec.arts.tv.soaps (r.a.t.s.), which discusses soap operas, is analyzed. The method
combines user surveys with message analysis to show the prevalence and importance of humor in
r.a.t.s. Close analysis of five exemplary humorous messages shows how the groupâs humor arises from
the juxtaposition of close and distant readings of the soap opera, which place the participants in close
relationships to one another, and distance them from the soap operaâs writers and producers. Group
solidarity is also created as participants draw extensively on previous messages to ground their own
humor. Humor is also shown to be a primary mechanism for the establishment of individuality, as
participants combine the shared meanings and play with the shared parameters of the group in
idiosyncratic ways
The Swedish Model: Balancing Markets and Gifts in the Music Industry
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final publication is available from Taylor & Francis at http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15405702.2011.536680.The internet has destabilized media industries. This article uses the case of Swedish independent music
labels, musicians, and fans to articulate one model for understanding the new roles each can take in this
new context. Interviews, participant observation, and popular media coverage are used to show how
labels and musicians in this scene loosely organize with fans to create a gift economy among
themselves. Although they seek to earn money, they are not focused getting it from the audience.
Instead, they engage the audience as equals with whom they can build a larger community that benefits
them all. The article shows how they use giving songs away and engaging directly with audience
members through the internet to pursue this goal. In contrast to discourses against file sharing, the
analysis demonstrates how media producers may reconcile themselves to the participatory culture of
the Internet
FĂŁs ou amigos? enxergando a mĂdia social como fazem os mĂșsicos
Na Ășltima dĂ©cada, as audiĂȘncias engajadas atravĂ©s das mĂdias sociais se tornaram um importante elemento na vida dos mĂșsicos. O artigo analisa entrevistas com trinta e seis mĂșsicos para compreender como eles apreendem suas interaçÔes e relaçÔes com audiĂȘncias online. TambĂ©m ressalta os limites incertos entre fĂŁs e amigos, identifcando como interaçÔes online podem trazer recompensas interpessoais para mĂșsicos, assim como gerar desafos interpessoais. MĂșsicos equilibram estas tensĂ”es atravĂ©s de uma gama de estratĂ©gias que dependem da necessidade de protegerem a si mesmos, seus entes queridos e a integridade da experiĂȘncia de seus fĂŁs. Ao invĂ©s de se aproximar da plateia online como fĂŁs que sĂŁo necessariamente menos poderosos, muitos dos mĂșsicos os tratam como iguais
Agreements and Disagreements in a Computer-Mediated Discussion
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The publisher's version is available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1207/s15327973rlsi2904_2.Agreements and disagreements in a predominantly female computer-mediated discussion group which
discusses soap operas are analyzed in terms of their message features. The findings differ from those on agreements and disagreements in oral interaction and in written letters. These agreements included
qualifications, provision of reasoning, elaborations, and other features uncommon in oral and epistolary
agreements. The disagreements were more mitigated than the agreements, but were more likely to
contain direct contradictory assertions than agreements were to contain affirming assertions. They too
were likely to include elaborations. These findings are attributed interactions between the medium, the
topic under discussion, the context of media use, participant gender and the context participants strive to create
Tunes that Bind?: Predicting Friendship Strength in a Music-Based Social Network
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final publication is available from Taylor & Francis at http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13691180802635430.Despite the popularity of social network sites based on common interests, the association between
these shared interests and relational development is not well understood. This manuscript reports
results of an empirical investigation of interpersonal relationships on Last.fm, a music-based social
network site with a multinational user base. In addition to baseline descriptors of relational behavior,
the chief goals of this study were to examine the degree to which Last.fm relationships are characterized
by homophily (and particularly by shared musical taste), the extent to which communication via Last.fm
is associated with other forms of communication (both offline and online), how such communication
behavior is associated with demographic and relational characteristics, and whether these variables
predict strength of relational development. Results indicate that although Last.fm relational partners
exhibit shared musical taste, this shared taste is not associated with relational development. Rather,
following media multiplexity theory, relational development is strongly and uniquely associated with
communication behavior across almost all forms of communication (including Last.fm). These results
suggest that shared interests may foster the creation of weak ties, but conversion of these connections
to strong ties is relatively rare
Put Down that Phone and Talk to Me: Understanding the Roles of Mobile Phone Norm Adherence and Similarity in Relationships
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The published version will be available in 2014 from http://www.sagepub.com/journals/Journal202140.This study uses co-orientation theory to examine the impact of mobile phone use on relational
quality across three co-present contexts. It investigates the relationship between perceived
similarity, actual similarity, and understanding of mobile phone usage on relationship outcomes,
and uses a new measure of mobile relational interference to assess how commitment,
satisfaction, and liking are affected by perceptions of relational partners' mobile phone use.
Contrary to popular belief, the results from this study of 69 dyads reveals that, at least within a
sample of young Americans, failing to adhere to injunctive (i.e., societal) norms regarding
mobile phone usage does not impact relational quality. Rather, results indicate that perceived
adherence to participants' own internal standards âby both the participant, and the participant's
relational partnerâ and perceived similarity between partners were more influential.
Keywords: commitment; co-orientation theory; etiquette; liking; mobile phone; satisfactio
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