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Recontextualizing YouTube: From Macro–Micro to Mass‐Mediated Communicative Repertoires
Author(s) -
Rymes Betsy
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
anthropology and education quarterly
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.531
H-Index - 46
eISSN - 1548-1492
pISSN - 0161-7761
DOI - 10.1111/j.1548-1492.2012.01170.x
Subject(s) - repertoire , mass media , sociology , semiotics , multimodality , nexus (standard) , discourse analysis , deixis , linguistics , media studies , epistemology , computer science , literature , political science , art , philosophy , embedded system , law
In this article, I deconstruct the macro–micro dichotomy by arguing that the very same mass‐media messages that appear culturally homogenizing (like catchy tunes and phrases) also invite creative recontextualizations ( Bauman and Briggs 1990 ). Moreover, the more widely circulated and mass‐produced a message is, the more highly diverse the interactions with it will be. This is because these widely circulating forms become incorporated into individuals' communicative repertoires ( Rymes 2010 ), to be deployed in indeterminate variation. I illustrate this point by first looking at the meteoric rise of the pop artist “Soulja Boy” and his hit, “Crank Dat.” Following the illustration of the circulation and recontextualization of Soulja Boy's hit, I apply this method of analysis to a less seemingly trivial mass‐mediated movement—Obama's first presidential campaign. By tracing the pathway of semiotic forms as recontextualized and circulated via YouTube, I demonstrate an empirical approach for studying how widely circulating cultural emblems become incorporated into individual‐level communicative repertoires. This approach is important to scholars of Anthropology and Education because, unlike micro–macro approaches, which often rely on a priori demographic or interactional categories for analysis, a repertoire approach provides a nonessentializing way of investigating difference in and out of classrooms. [communicative repertoire, popular culture, discourse analysis, mass media]