Do avatars dream of electronic picket lines?

Author:

Blodgett Bridget,Tapia Andrea

Abstract

PurposeThis paper aims to define and articulate the concept of digital protestainment, to address how technologies have enabled boundaries to become more permeable, and in which this permeability leads to the engendering of new cultures.Design/methodology/approachTwo case studies, within Second Life and EVE Online, are examined to see how digital protestainment, through the lens of cultural borderlands, creates a hybridized culture. Recorded interviews and textual analysis of web sites are used to illustrate the concepts of play, work, and blended activities.FindingsWithin virtual environments the process of hybridization is not only increased in size, scope, form, and function. The borderlands process draws in cultural elements through a complex interchange between the online and the offline, in which hybridized cultural bits are carried out into other spaces.Research limitations/implicationsThe success of the cases does not represent all digital protest examples and so this study is limited in its ability to generalize to the population of virtual protests. This study limits the realm of digital protestainment to virtual worlds but the concept could be applied to any form of virtual community.Practical implicationsCompanies that host these worlds will need to become aware not only of what their audience is but also how that audience will mobilize and the likely outcomes of their mobilization. Virtual worlds offer organizational leaders a new resource for training, support, and recruitment.Originality/valueThe theoretical concept of cultural borderlands is expanded to the digital environment and introduced as a potentially new and useful tool to internet researchers.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Library and Information Sciences,Computer Science Applications,Information Systems

Reference36 articles.

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2. Bennett, L.W. (2004), “Communicating global activism. Strengths and vulnerabilities of networked politics”, in Donk, W.V.D. (Ed.), Cyberprotest. New Media, Citizens and Social Movements, Routledge, New York, NY.

3. Berg, B. (1989), “A dramaturgical look at interviewing”, Qualitative Research Methods for the Social Sciences, Allyn and Bacon, Boston, MA.

4. Blodgett, B. and Tapia, A. (2010), “When protests go virtual: how organizing social protest in virtual worlds changes the nature of organizing”, paper presented at the 16th Americas Conference on Information Systems. Lima.

5. Boellstorff, T. (2008), Coming of Age in Second Life: An Anthropologist Explores the Virtually Human, Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ.

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