I'm not going to link to the article I'm referencing today, but I miss
the heyday of blogging.
Twitter is much more popular now than blogging and I sometimes wonder how that platform has changed
people's conception of what social justice writing is or should be. I think many people do Twitter threads well, in terms of fleshing out
thoughts in ways more similar to longform.
Twitter has increased the character count and has made it easier for users to thread their Tweets into a continuous "longform" piece if they wish. Although, I find using that feature to be much clunkier with my usual writing process where I move words and sentences around, compared to the Blogger interface that is essentially a giant text field. For instance, I wrote about this topic on Twitter this morning as well (ironically?) - the piece for Blogger was going to be exactly the same, but even as I copy-pasted the Twitter thread to Blogger, I realized right away that it read choppily and I had additional thoughts to insert.
Anyway, on Twitter, I also see a lot of
social justice "dunking" where the aim is to humiliate someone for being
so "self-evidently" wrong that it doesn't warrant explanation. I've had run-ins with some serious assholes, as I've sometimes written about here where it's been clear folks were using me as a prop to score cool points to their followings.
Not that this kind of thing didn't happen during the blogging years of the aughts. I remember a lot of blog wars and much of the bully behavior and profile is similar. But, engaging with people on Twitter, particularly in a "dunk" context,
gets not worth it fast. Unlike with comment moderation at a website,
any fucken rando can chime in to the convo. And, even if you block
assholes, you know their comment is still "there" on Twitter, for other people to engage with and view.
Or, you see a bunch of people vehemently agreeing with the dunk, but no one really explains.... why. This phenomenon probably happens more on Twitter than on blogging platforms, because it more coincides with what Twitter was for. It was designed for the hot, short opinion.
Dunking has its role, I suppose, perhaps mostly if/when users are building solidarity around someone else being wrong/stupid/bad.
But, its purpose and impact on audiences compared to analysis is quite
different. With respect to the article in question that I read yesterday, it was a longform piece that read like the
author thought social justice writing should be a series of "dunks" and
social justice lingo with almost zero analysis.
Part of this, too, might be attributable to a lot of gender
studies/social justice writing in academia being inaccessible to many
lay audiences - physically, financially, and/or linguistically. For instance, I read a recent journal article, and had
to do so 5 times before *I think* I understood it.
It read as though it was written *for* other academics within the same
bubble and sphere who already know the
zillion other articles already written about the topic at hand, as well
as the obscure terminology, rather than for the masses.
Nonetheless, the concepts within academic articles often flow onto
Twitter and, like a modern version of the game "telephone," are often
warped beyond what the author meant or intended.
So, people think they know what something means, but their understanding
comes from a "dunk" or from someone else's (or their own) misreading.
And concurrent with these dynamics are bots, deliberate ratfucking, and
bad actors.
Despite the decline of blogging, I've
also kept up my blog for more than a decade, for these (and other)
reasons, including that I just get different things out of each
platform.
UPDATE: Okay, the editor-in-chief of the article that inspired this post has publicly addressed the, um, problematic article. So, it's this.
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