Tracy L. M. Kennedy, "The Personal is Political:
Feminist Blogging and Virtual Consciousness-Raising" (Page 3 of 4)
The Woman Question: Feminists and the Blogosphere
Feminist blog research is attempting to address problems of the
blogosphere. For example, the paper "Women & Children Last: The
Discursive Construction of Weblogs" by Herring et al. examines the
obvious absence of women from public discourses about blogs.[13]
The authors argue that "filter-blogs" (blogs that link to world events,
online happenings, etc.) have been constructed as privileged blogs.
Primarily authored by men, these blogs not only tend to marginalize the
content of women's blogs (which are often diary-journal style), but also
legitimize a certain type of (male) blog as valuable and worthy of
readership. It is this type of blog (and blogger) that receives the most
attention in the blogosphere and outside media, such as newspaper and
television, where the focus is rarely on women's blogs or their
content.
Given this construction of "worthy" or "legitimate" blogs, there have
been numerous debates around the absence of women. The central question
remains, "Where are the women in the blogosphere?" Indeed, there are
many women blogging, but whether these blogs are legitimized is another
story. Trammel and Keshelashvili's research supports Herring's findings
that men outnumber women in producing the Web's most popular
blogs.[14]
These "where-are-the-women" debates stem from several
issues: First, there are few women listed in many of the top blog lists,
or what is often referred to as the "A-list" of bloggers. A-list
bloggers (bloggers with thousands of hits a day) often seem to dominate
the blogosphere, and their viewpoints are often the ones that are most
read, commented on, and linked to online. A-list blogs are typically
"filter-blogs" or "knowledge blogs" (blogs about technological
information and observations). There have many blog posts dedicated to
the problems inherent to "A-listers" and the hierarchies of blogs
themselves.[15]
Many of these posts discuss how many A-listers
belong to a certain demographic—white, right-wing, heterosexual men—and
how this works to exclude others.
Second, given the hierarchies of blogs and bloggers, there has been
much discussion about the experiences of women within the blogosphere,
which is itself a gendered and raced environment. Kennedy and Robinson's
research indicates that the comments people leave on blogs reflect
gendered communication patterns similar to those evident in face-to-face
communication.[16]
Their research shows that women tend to be
more expressive and inclusive of others in their comments, while men's
comments are generally assertive and competitive. We need to keep in
mind the implications of such gendered interaction patterns within
blogs, as women's opinions may not be heard, validated, or taken
seriously by other readers.
What becomes evident in feminist discussions of blogs and blogging is
the tumultuous relationship between masculine technological discourses
and women's online and offline experiences. Women's historical
relationship with technology has been rocky at best. For example,
feminist literature concerning technology focuses on the importance of
social roles, the hierarchy of these roles, and the relationships of
power between women and men in relation to technological skills and
use.[17]
There is often the expectation that the sole purpose of
technology used in the home is to reduce labor and save time in order to
alleviate women's domestic responsibilities, but this has not been the
case.[18]
Having said this, what are the benefits of blogging
for women and how can women overcome the gendered, raced, and classed
barriers that currently exist in the blogosphere? While the blogosphere
can be considered challenging terrain for women, we cannot and should
not ignore how blogs can be utilized by feminists as tools to raise
social consciousness, build community, and promote cultural change.
There are several specific ways in which blogging as a virtual
consciousness-raising tool can be a vibrant platform for feminist
activism, as both an intimate and communal political practice. These
areas include self expression, sharing stories, and interaction and
dialogue.
Self Expression
Many blogs are diary or journal style, serving to document events in
everyday life. While seemingly mundane, this style of blog provides a
useful way to express oneself, a place to unload and unpack feelings and
situations. What is useful about blogs in particular, as opposed to a
more traditional media, is that these expressions are automatically
documented and archived, making it easy to refer back to one's own
narratives in one's own words. In addition to journaling, blogs can be a
place to vet and share opinions on current events, political
standpoints, and social issues. While these diary-style blogs are often
excluded from blogging discourses, they are particularly valuable to
women. An important lesson from the Second Wave movement, which emerged
out of consciousness-raising groups, is encapsulated in the slogan "The
personal is the political." Carol Hanisch's short essay, "The Personal
is Political," notes that consciousness-raising is not simply "therapy."
She says: "One of the first things we discover in these groups is that
personal problems are political problems. There are no personal
solutions at this time."[19]
Blogging about personal experiences
can be a way to situate those experiences within broader sociocultural
contexts:
The "personal is political" therefore meant that our
personal lives are in considerable part politically delimited and
determined so that improving our personal experiences meant we must
collectively address political relationships and structures.[20]
As early feminists recognized, telling stories is often only the
beginning of a larger feminist process of engaging collectively to
pursue social reform.
Sharing Stories
A question central to blogging is: "Is anyone reading this?" While
not all women who create blogs are concerned with whether or not anyone
is reading them, wider readership can open up a new public space that
might lead to more meaningful interactions and recreate the notion of
the personal as political. One of the key differences between Web sites
and blogs is the linking structure—permalinks,[21]
trackbacks,[22] and blogrolls[23]—between blog posts and
bloggers. These forms of linking allow feminist women to connect with
each other and establish social networks. Kathie Sarachild's explanation
of consciousness-raising groups in the 1970s is pertinent:
The aim of going around the room in a meeting to hear
each woman's testimony, a common—and exciting—practice in
consciousness-raising, is to help stay focused on a point, to bring the
discussion back to the main subject after exploring a tangent, to get
the experience of as many people as possible in the common pool of
knowledge. The purpose of hearing from everyone was never to be nice or
tolerant or to develop speaking skill or the "ability to listen." It was
to get closer to the truth. Knowledge and information would make it
possible for people to be "able" to speak. The purpose of hearing
people's feelings and experience was not therapy, was not to give
someone a chance to get something off her chest . . . that is something for
a friendship. It was to hear what she had to say. The importance of
listening to a woman's feelings was collectively to analyze the
situation of women, not to analyze her. The idea was not to
change women, was not to make "internal changes" except in the sense of
knowing more. It was and is the conditions women face, it's male
supremacy, we want to change.[24]
These changes are now beginning to transpire in cyberspace through
blogging, leading to an awareness of larger social inequalities. Some
bloggers are even connecting across differences of race, class,
ethnicity, and sexuality to see the broader implications of their own
positions, as well as those of other women. Blogging has the potential
to help create and encourage a new form of feminism that better avoids
some of the pitfalls of an earlier generation of feminist activism,
those often exclusively middle-class and heterosexual
consciousness-raising groups.[25]
We can also avoid the dangers
of ethnocentrism[26]
and the notion of "rescuing" women from
other cultures according to our own definitions of feminism and
advocacy. For example, the Muslim Woman's Blog[27]
shows the
individual and collective struggles of Muslim women and how they work to
address the social inequalities they experience. Reading a range of
feminist blogs can help us get out of some of the ideological boxes that
often trap us in old patterns. These blogs help us consider alternative
and diverse perspectives and lead us to consider for ourselves more
rigorous feminist positions.
Interaction and Dialogue
While some are content to simply read their favorite feminist blogs,
one of the key features of blogs is the potential for interactivity.
Online dialogue through blogs can happen in two ways: First one can
respond to a blog post on one's own blog and link back to the original
post via permalinks and trackbacks, thereby connecting bloggers and
establishing a feminist network. Second, if the blog has an "add
comment" feature, conversations can occur within the blog itself. This
is useful to feminist virtual consciousness-raising, as it allows
readers to actively engage in discussion. Bortree's research illustrates
that blogs help build intimacy among women and enable dialogue about
experiences that would otherwise be difficult to share.[28]
There are, however, some problems with enabling comments on blogs. For
example, the abundance of spam comments that have infiltrated blogs has
caused many people to disable the comment feature on their blogs. While
passwords and word verification programs might alleviate some of the
comment spamming, it is difficult to avoid altogether. Enabling comments
on blogs is double-edged. While it allows feminists to openly discuss
and engage in dialogue, it also opens the door to antifeminist
commentary. Many of the responses to the "where-are-the-women" question
clearly reflect hostility and sexism. One only has to look at the
comments on any feminist blog to experience such resistance, misogyny,
and antifeminism. Feminist bloggers are constantly in the position of
having to validate their standpoints and dialogue with those who
blatantly display antifeminist sentiments. The endless harassment and
rants can become tiresome. leading some to cease to respond and some to
disable the comment feature or delete comments. If we are to consider
blogs as a vehicle for consciousness-raising, we have to be wary of the
ramifications of opening up feminist discussions to the World Wide Web.
As evident in the flaming that took place in early feminist
listservs,[29]
the public nature of the Internet allows
feminists to dialogue and network, but it also permits antifeminist
groups to do the same—even in virtual feminist spaces. Despite this
negativity, difficult responses are a reminder that there is much work
to be done. As a feminist strategy, interactivity and intimacy as a type
of virtual consciousness-raising can be seen as stemming from feminist
activism of the Second Wave, and I strongly encourage feminists to lay
claim to this corner of the Internet.
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