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From http://www.danah.org/papers/essays/ClassDivisions.html:

It starts:
Over the last six months, I've noticed an increasing number of press articles about how high school teens are leaving MySpace for Facebook. That's only partially true. There is indeed a change taking place, but it's not a shift so much as a fragmentation. Until recently, American teenagers were flocking to MySpace. The picture is now being blurred. Some teens are flocking to MySpace. And some teens are flocking to Facebook. Who goes where gets kinda sticky... probably because it seems to primarily have to do with socio-economic class.

I want to take a moment to make a meta point here. I have been traipsing through the country talking to teens and I've been seeing this transition for the past 6-9 months but I'm having a hard time putting into words. Americans aren't so good at talking about class and I'm definitely feeling that discomfort. It's sticky, it's uncomfortable, and to top it off, we don't have the language for marking class in a meaningful way. So this piece is intentionally descriptive, but in being so, it's also hugely problematic. I don't have the language to get at what I want to say, but I decided it needed to be said anyhow. I wish I could just put numbers in front of it all and be done with it, but instead, I'm going to face the stickiness and see if I can get my thoughts across. Hopefully it works.

and concludes:

"Anyhow, I don't know where to go with this, but I wanted to get it out there. So here it is. MySpace and Facebook are new representations of the class divide in American youth. Le sigh."

(Full disclosure: I have a Facebook account, but not one on MySpace.)

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Date: 2007-06-27 03:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] digitalemur.livejournal.com
I can't say I'm surprised by this divide, since I know who started Facebook (my god that man should NOT be the public face of his company, he doesn't seem to know how not to condescend), and I know MySpace has been way more open to the general public, up until just recently when Facebook caught up, and has been a good site for groups like indie bands and rollerderby leagues to have spaces, because it's more open.

Facebook tries to keep from registering individuals who don't actually exist, or groups as individuals, though they don't seem to have figured out that Grigoriy Efimovich Rasputin isn't actually a Yale student yet, which is fine with me. In academic librarianship Facebook usage for keeping track of people you only see once a year, or keeping in touch for committee work, is really taking off.

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