Thursday, April 5, 2012

Overloading the Public Sphere



When one considers the definition of news as the act of publicizing private affairs, the important role of the ever-expanding world of social media in current social affairs becomes evident.

As an upper-middle class immigrant living in the United States, I belong to the class of society called the bourgeoisie. I can afford to go to school, I can afford my own place, I will soon have an undergraduate degree, and every now and then I can afford to spend money on the little pleasures of life like a movie, or a fancy dinner, or maybe sometimes even a weekend getaway to Beacon, upstate New York.

All of these similarities between such members of the bourgeoisie allow authoritative organizations such as banks and political parties to address us as a whole. We are homogenized through our social and economic statuses. Yet what happens when we try to form a collective opinion?

This is where social media has had most of its effect. With a virtually endless array of publicity tools at our disposal (Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Blogger, Wordpress just to name a few), it has become far easier to uphold an opinion even of just a few people subscribe to it. There is no filter, there is no fact checking, and everyone can publish information quickly and generally for free online. News is slowly transforming from public to personal opinions. To form a public opinion means to speak through a unified voice — one that finds common points in individual opinions. Yet today it is perhaps most difficult to do this.

And this is one of the major issues of our age: the fact that we can be addressed as a whole, yet we can only retort individually. 

No comments:

Post a Comment