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{"id":86,"date":"2017-03-15T17:08:42","date_gmt":"2017-03-15T17:08:42","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/emmanuel.coventry.domains\/?p=86"},"modified":"2017-04-28T16:59:27","modified_gmt":"2017-04-28T16:59:27","slug":"before-i-get-old-what-it-means-to-belong-to-an-online-community","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/emmanuel.coventry.domains\/study-archive\/before-i-get-old-what-it-means-to-belong-to-an-online-community\/","title":{"rendered":"Before I Get Old: What it means to belong to an Online Community"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"\"<\/a>\"\"<\/a><\/p>\n

Sources: Wikia, Business Wire.<\/p>\n

Introduction<\/strong><\/p>\n

Society expresses itself in collective groups, which allow for individuals to interact with each other, develop relationships, share experiences and thus create meaning. This is the realisation of communities.<\/p>\n

Nonetheless, an online community acts as a two-edged sword. It is an umbrella for healthy communication, and a platform which invades privacy (Preece 2001: 8). \u00a0This society consists of individuals who share the job of producers, consumers and prosumers. It is a space of fantasy where terms and conditions (values and norms) of \u2018real life\u2019 become secondary.<\/p>\n

I shall be writing on the theme of Online Community in close relationship with the Social Media site, BIGO Live. I aim to shed light on what it means to be part of an online community, how it is formulated, and the identity and collective meaning which shape the experiences of its users.<\/p>\n

Before I get Old: What it means to be part of an Online Community<\/strong><\/p>\n

\u00a0\"\"<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\n

Source: Standing on Giants<\/p>\n

The online community flaunts a young and vibrant group of individuals who feel the need to depict their lives as exciting, to appear young, trendy and \u2018cool\u2019. The modernist perspective perceives the other as something or someone who reflects a different perspective from the viewer (Young 1999: 5). Just as the name; Before I Get Old (BIGO) implies, an online community is constituted of individuals who assemble under the banner of youthfulness, and use it as a medium of sharing experiences and developing relationships. To be young is to abstain from things which \u2018old\u2019 people would do, such as living life with caution and being fully aware of the consequences of their actions. BIGO, as an online community promotes the ideas of living life to the fullest and being obsessed with yourself.<\/p>\n

BIGO Live invites individuals into the lifestyle of narcissism, with the promise of fame in return (BIGO Technology PTE LTD 2017). The online community entails the commodification of communication. The practise of inviting individuals to partake of the \u2018glorious\u2019 act, which is human interaction, in return for a youthful and vibrant life online. Ferreday (in Karatzogianni and Kuntsman 2012: 80) claims that, \u2018the digital has become a site of struggle over what constitutes reality\u2019. The online community acts as a sweet escape from the troubles of the real world. An unrealistic virtual space where desires and fantasies are performed.<\/p>\n

How is an Online Community formulated?<\/strong><\/p>\n

\"\"<\/a><\/p>\n

Online communities are created because of togetherness felt by a group of individuals, due to the mutuality of their beliefs and interests. Ritzer (2007: 36 \u2013 40) discusses the \u2018Something-Nothing Continuum\u2019. He argues that, the social world is comprised of the combination of \u2018nothing\u2019 and \u2018something\u2019. He furthermore defines something as a social practise that is generally produced, controlled and somewhat rich in distinctive significant content. He describes nothing as somewhat lacking in content. Ferreday (2011: 25) describes community as \u2018a process\u2019.<\/p>\n

Online communities undergo a procedure, which features the production of content that reflects significant meaning, and others that do not. It goes back and forth, and shapes our overall understanding of this community, as a digital reflection of the social world.<\/p>\n

Everything that happens within this space usually expresses the singular concept; Something-Nothing Continuum. Within BIGO live, certain users within this online community use this platform as a stage for the expression of matters, which they find meaningful within society, such as postmodern political occurrences and the straining placed on the public as an aftermath of them. This performance of \u2018something\u2019 formulates this online community as an educational sphere, which allows for meaningful and positive interaction on things that matter, within a global scale. Nevertheless, online communities are mostly comprised of nothing; issues and topics which stem from matters of negative and less meaningful subjects. This aspect of the online community features the phase of self-realisation; the realisation that, we as individuals derive pleasure from subversive and socially unacceptable themes such as pornography. The sensual drive that accompanies the human flesh may have located its daring partner, digital technology (Nguyen and Alexander in Shields 1996: 117). This leads us to the discovery of the chaotic identity, which characterises the nature of online communities, and the experiences faced by its participants.<\/p>\n

Identity and Meaning in Online Communities <\/strong><\/p>\n

\u00a0\"\"<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\n

Source: Brand Networks<\/p>\n

The coming of online communities has endorsed the expression of selves. These include selves that:<\/p>\n