Deliberate Design or Unintended Consequences: The Argumentative Uses of Facebook During the Arab Spring
Author(s) -
Marcin Lewiński,
Dima Mohammed
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of deliberative democracy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2634-0488
DOI - 10.16997/jdd.133
Subject(s) - argumentation theory , argumentative , unintended consequences , deliberation , context (archaeology) , entertainment , political science , public relations , sociology , internet privacy , computer science , epistemology , politics , geography , law , philosophy , archaeology
By looking at the argumentative uses of ‘status updates’, we discuss how Facebook design and context of use influenced opportunities for deliberation during the Egyptian phase of the Arab Spring in early 2011. Our basic point is that, somewhat against the grain of much debate on designing precise tools for supporting online argumentation, many benefits for open and critical argumentation result, in this case, from unintended, indeed parasitic, uses of online technologies. This is evident in the ways that (seemingly) politically trivial, “commercially colonized” and entertainment-oriented technologies such as Facebook or YouTube become major arenas for deliberative mobilization and serious argumentation.
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