From Global Village to Identity Tribes: Context Collapse and the Darkest Timeline

In this article we trace the development of two narratives describing social media that informed much of internet scholarship. One draws from McLuhan’s axiom positing that communication networks would bring forth a ‘global village,’ a deliberate contradiction in terms to foreground the seamless inte...

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Main Author: Marco Bastos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2021-07-01
Series:Media and Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/mediaandcommunication/article/view/3930
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spelling doaj-85d63bf466c94eafaa91e0f5c9b55c462021-07-23T10:23:05ZengCogitatioMedia and Communication2183-24392021-07-0193162410.17645/mac.v9i3.39302044From Global Village to Identity Tribes: Context Collapse and the Darkest TimelineMarco Bastos0School of Information and Communication Studies, University College Dublin, IrelandIn this article we trace the development of two narratives describing social media that informed much of internet scholarship. One draws from McLuhan’s axiom positing that communication networks would bring forth a ‘global village,’ a deliberate contradiction in terms to foreground the seamless integration of villages into a global community. Social media would shrink the world and reshape it into a village by moving information instantaneously from any location at any time. By leveraging network technology, it would further increase the density of connections within and across social communities, thereby integrating geographic and cultural areas into a village stretching across the globe. The second narrative comprises a set of metaphors equally inspired by geography but emphasizing instead identity and tribalism as opposed to integration and cooperation. Both narratives are spatially inspired and foreground real-world consequences, either by supporting cooperation or by ripping apart the fabric of society. They nonetheless offer opposing accounts of communication networks: the first is centered on communication and collaboration, and the second highlights polarization and division. The article traces the theoretical and technological developments driving these competing narratives and argues that a digitally enabled global society may in fact reinforce intergroup boundaries and outgroup stereotyping typical of geographically situated communities.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/mediaandcommunication/article/view/3930context collapsedisinformationgeographyglobal villageinternet studiespolarization
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marco Bastos
spellingShingle Marco Bastos
From Global Village to Identity Tribes: Context Collapse and the Darkest Timeline
Media and Communication
context collapse
disinformation
geography
global village
internet studies
polarization
author_facet Marco Bastos
author_sort Marco Bastos
title From Global Village to Identity Tribes: Context Collapse and the Darkest Timeline
title_short From Global Village to Identity Tribes: Context Collapse and the Darkest Timeline
title_full From Global Village to Identity Tribes: Context Collapse and the Darkest Timeline
title_fullStr From Global Village to Identity Tribes: Context Collapse and the Darkest Timeline
title_full_unstemmed From Global Village to Identity Tribes: Context Collapse and the Darkest Timeline
title_sort from global village to identity tribes: context collapse and the darkest timeline
publisher Cogitatio
series Media and Communication
issn 2183-2439
publishDate 2021-07-01
description In this article we trace the development of two narratives describing social media that informed much of internet scholarship. One draws from McLuhan’s axiom positing that communication networks would bring forth a ‘global village,’ a deliberate contradiction in terms to foreground the seamless integration of villages into a global community. Social media would shrink the world and reshape it into a village by moving information instantaneously from any location at any time. By leveraging network technology, it would further increase the density of connections within and across social communities, thereby integrating geographic and cultural areas into a village stretching across the globe. The second narrative comprises a set of metaphors equally inspired by geography but emphasizing instead identity and tribalism as opposed to integration and cooperation. Both narratives are spatially inspired and foreground real-world consequences, either by supporting cooperation or by ripping apart the fabric of society. They nonetheless offer opposing accounts of communication networks: the first is centered on communication and collaboration, and the second highlights polarization and division. The article traces the theoretical and technological developments driving these competing narratives and argues that a digitally enabled global society may in fact reinforce intergroup boundaries and outgroup stereotyping typical of geographically situated communities.
topic context collapse
disinformation
geography
global village
internet studies
polarization
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/mediaandcommunication/article/view/3930
work_keys_str_mv AT marcobastos fromglobalvillagetoidentitytribescontextcollapseandthedarkesttimeline
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