Available Formats
Blogging: How Our Private Thoughts Went Public
By (Author) Kristin Roeschenthaler Wolfe
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
4th June 2014
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Communication studies
Semantics, discourse analysis, stylistics
Internet guides and online services
302.2314
Hardback
106
Width 163mm, Height 237mm, Spine 14mm
308g
Blogging: How Our Private Thoughts Went Public examines self-representational writing from its historical roots in personal diaries to its current form in personal blogs. Widely available on the Internet, personal blogs are the latest form of an ever more public writing style of self-reflection. Utilizing Hannah Arendts philosophy of public, private, and social, this book delves deeper into the question of public versus private and provides an entrance for Arendts work into todays mediated world. Arendts understanding of public, private, and social allows us to better understand the need for boundaries and for both public and private spaces in our lives. Interpersonal communication theories, including boundary management theory and parasocial framework theory, help to better understand how people navigate public and private boundaries in communication. These theories provide a philosophical view of our overshared and overmediated world, and, specifically, how it affects our communication styles and practices.
At last, a book about blogging that draws its inspiration and template not from politics but philosophy ranging from Aristotle to Hannah Arendt. Beautifully written, deeply contemplated, entirely convincing, Wolfes book is a signal contribution to media theory and the world at large. -- Paul Levinson, Fordham University, author of New New Media
Kristin Roeschenthaler Wolfe is instructor of public speaking and rhetoric and composition at Pennsylvania State University.