Because Internet

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Because Internet Page 34

by Gretchen McCulloch


  The Library of Congress archives: Erin Blakemore. June 15, 2017. “Why the Library of Congress Thinks Your Favorite Meme Is Worth Preserving.” Smithsonian. www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/library-of-congress-meme-preserve-180963705/. (No author cited.) (No date cited.) Web Cultures Web Archive. Library of Congress. www.loc.gov/collections/web-cultures-web-archive/.

  full-time jobs in advanced memology: Justin Caffier. May 19, 2017. “Meme Historians Are an Inevitability.” Vice. www.vice.com/en_us/article/meme-historians-are-an-inevitability.

  Our meme dissertators from 2014: Whitney Phillips and Ryan M. Milner. 2017. The Ambivalent Internet. John Wiley & Sons.

  “The ostensibly unfinished”: Limor Shifman. 2014. Memes in Digital Culture. MIT Press.

  sixty times larger: 5.5 million English Wikipedia articles. Wikimedia Foundation. February 25, 2018. “Wikipedia: Size comparisons.” Wikipedia. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Size_comparisons.

  Though fanfiction existed: Anne Jamison. 2013. Fic: Why Fanfiction Is Taking Over the World. Smart Pop.

  They’ve gathered on blogs: Estimates as of February 2018: 3.6 million works on Archive of Our Own. archiveofourown.org/. 8.1 million works on Fanfiction.net extrapolated from: Charles Sendlor. July 18, 2010. “FanFiction.Net Member Statistics.” Fan Fiction Statistics - FFN Research. ffnresearch.blogspot.ca/2010/07/fanfictionnet-users.html. fffinnagain. November 23, 2017. “Lost Works and Posting Rates on fanfiction.net and Archive of Our Own.” Sound Interest. fffinnagain.tumblr.com/post/167805956488/lost-works-and-posting-rates-on-fanfictionnet-and. destinationtoast. January 2, 2016. “2015 a (statistical) year in fandom.” Archive of Our Own. archiveofourown.org/works/5615386. Thanks to fffinnagain and destinationtoast for personal communication on calculating fanfic stats. Wattpad representatives did not respond to several requests for clarification about what their reported numbers meant, so stats from Wattpad are not reported here. Gavia Baker-Whitelaw. January 21, 2015. “Tumblr Launches Tool to Measure the Most Popular Fandoms.” The Daily Dot. www.dailydot.com/parsec/tumblr-fandometrics-trends/.

  Chapter 8. A New Metaphor

  I searched for “English language”: Getty Images, Shutterstock, iStock, Adobe Stock, Pixabay, Bigstock, Fotolia, StockSnap.io, Fotosearch, ImageZoo, Solid Stock Art, Pexels, Crestock, Alamy, SuperStock, Stock Photo Secrets, Depositphotos, Thinkstock, Stock Free Images, Unsplash. Compiled by cross-referencing several lists of top stock photo sites and removing sites that didn’t return at least ten results for “English language.”

  neuroscientists invoke computers: Gary Marcus. June 27, 2015. “Face It, Your Brain Is a Computer.” The New York Times. www.nytimes.com/2015/06/28/opinion/sunday/face-it-your-brain-is-a-computer.html.

  Wikipedia only has articles: Wikipedia Foundation. As of March 2019. “List of Wikipedias.” Wikimedia. meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/List_of_Wikipedias.

  Google Translate supports: Google Translate: Languages. translate.google.com/intl/en/about/languages/. As of March 1, 2018.

  Major social networks: (No author cited.) (No date cited.) “Localization.” Facebook for Developers. developers.facebook.com/docs/internationalization. (No author cited.) (No date cited.) “About the Twitter Translation Center.” Twitter Help Center. support.twitter.com/articles/434816.

  Even relatively substantial national languages: Jon Henley. February 26, 2018. “Icelandic Language Battles Threat of ‘Digital Extinction.’” The Guardian. www.theguardian.com/world/2018/feb/26/icelandic-language-battles-threat-of-digital-extinction.

  versions of these statistics: Google Translate listed 103 languages in both August 2016 and March 2019; Wikipedia listed 283 active languages in August 2016 and 293 in March 2019.

  Nonetheless, users are still figuring out ways: https://www.theringer.com/tech/2018/11/5/18056776/voice-texting-whatsapp-apple-2018.

  Popular culture and internet culture: Molly Sauter. July 31, 2017. “When WWW Trumps IRL: Why It’s Now Impossible to Pretend the Internet Is Somehow Less Real.” National Post. nationalpost.com/entertainment/books/book-reviews/when-www-trumps-irl-why-its-now-impossible-to-pretend-the-internet-is-somehow-less-real.

  ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ

  Index

  The page numbers in this index refer to the printed version of this book. The link provided will take you to the beginning of that print page. You may need to scroll forward from that location to find the corresponding reference on your e-reader.

  abbreviations, 30, 58, 87

  acronyms

  emoji used in lieu of, 185

  history of, 10–11

  in Jargon File, 72–73

  as polite hedges, 123

  and Pre Internet People cohort, 95

  social, 11–12, 48

  adolescents. See youth

  Advice Animals memes, 244–47, 250, 257

  aesthetic typography, 127–28

  “af” (as fuck), 31

  “afk” (away from keyboard), 72

  African Americans

  appropriation from, 4, 164–65

  coolness associated with, 22, 51

  and creative respellings, 25–26

  “double clap on syllables,” 172

  and spread of language between cities, 31

  age

  and adoption of new vocabulary terms, 32

  and internet usage, 85–86

  and technological interruptions, 219

  and telephone norms, 218

  Alcanter de Brahm, 133

  Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (Carroll), 175

  all caps

  to convey emphasis, 115–16, 118–19

  to convey shouting, 72, 116, 118

  in early computing, 118

  in formal vs. informal texts, 118–19

  and Full Internet People cohort, 83

  historical use of, 116

  and minimalist typography, 145

  routine correspondence written in, 117

  twentieth-century precedents for, 152

  All Things Linguistic blog, 142–43

  America Online (AOL), 239–40

  Android devices, 182

  Angelfire, 78

  AOL Instant Messenger (AIM), 78, 79, 99, 213, 217, 226

  Appalachia, 50

  Apple, 182

  Arabic and Arabizi, 51–55

  ASCII art, 175–76

  asterisks, 127–28, 138

  Atlas of North American English, The, 19–20

  attitudes, 40–62

  alignment with/against those in power, 40–41

  and appropriation of language, 50–51

  bias for previous standards in, 44–47, 49

  and class effects on language differences, 41–45

  and political aspects of grammar, 47

  strength of social identity, 50

  Austin, J. L., 187

  authorship, shared, 261–62

  avatars, 156

  “b4” (before), 72

  “bae” (babe; before anyone else), 22, 51, 135–36

  Baron, Naomi, 204

  Bashwiner, Meg, 64

  Bazin, Hervé, 133

  BeerAdvocate, 31

  Behold the Field meme needlework of author, 252–54, 259

  Bell, Alexander Graham, 201

  birthday emoji, 166–68, 173

  blackface, 165

  Blinkenlights, 255–56

  blogs, 34–35, 73, 224–25

  book metaphor for language, 265–69, 273–74

  boyd, danah, 81–82, 102, 103, 232

  “brb” (be right back), 72

  Brennan, Amanda, 260

  Brennan, Susan, 121–22

  British English spellings, 46–47

  Brown, Kara, 172

  “btw” (by the way), 72, 74 />
  Bulletin Board Systems (BBSes), 68

  Cambridge Analytica, 22–23

  Canadian spellings and pronunciations, 40–41, 48

  Carpenter, Nicole, 79

  Carroll, Lewis, 175

  case

  in formal language, 152

  initial caps, 145

  Ironic Capitals, 134, 138, 147

  and minimalist typography, 139–50

  for social/internet acronyms, 11, 48

  cat videos/pictures, 190, 241–44, 246

  Cedergren, Henrietta, 28–29

  chain emails, 77, 255

  Chambers, J. K., 40

  Charlemagne, Emperor, 2

  chat messaging

  CB Simulator model in, 211–12

  Internet Relay Chat model in, 68, 212

  at intersection of written and informal language, 214–15

  overlap in, 209–10, 212–14, 215

  polite fictions in management of, 219

  in professional contexts, 217

  as pure informal writing, 215–16

  real-time aspects of, 217–18

  social norms surrounding, 219

  status messages on, 226–27

  as third place, 228

  turn-taking in, 211, 212

  utterances in, 110–11

  children and the internet, 82–83, 100. See also youth

  Choi, Mary H.K., 186

  cities, spread of language between, 31

  clapping hands, 171–72

  class effects on language differences, 41–45

  cliques, dialect differences in, 38

  columbusing, 51

  commas as separation characters, 96, 112, 113

  complexity of messages, 57–58

  compound words, 48

  context collapse, 103

  conversations, 197–236

  fluid norms of, 198

  and greetings in emails, 204–7

  interruptions in, 209, 215, 219

  needs met in, 199

  phatic expressions in, 200–207

  and telephone etiquette, 201–3

  turn-taking in, 207–9

  videocall/videochat, 219–20

  See also chat messaging; third places

  copyright, 262

  correspondence, analysis of, 33

  co-speech, 166, 172–73

  court cases, emoji in, 193–94

  “crash” (my computer crashed), 74

  Crystal, David, 26–27, 91, 143–44, 204

  “cu l8tr” (see you later), 72

  cultural appropriation, 50–51, 164–65

  Cummings, E. E., 152

  Curzan, Anne, 45–46

  Darics, Erika, 125–26

  dashes as separation characters, 96–98, 111–12

  Davis, Claire, 58

  Dawkins, Richard, 238–39

  debate memes, 247

  Denham, Henry, 133

  Denis, Derek, 59–60

  dialect mapping, 18–26

  dictionaries, 265–67, 268

  Dictionary of American Regional English, 19, 20

  Dictionary of the English Language, A (Johnson), 266

  digital immigrants, 88

  digital natives, 76–77, 84

  digital residency, 100

  diglossia, 52

  disappearing content, 104, 222–23

  doge meme, 248–49, 250

  dot dot dot (ellipsis points), 96–98, 107–8, 111–13, 114, 150

  Dresner, Eli, 185–87

  Drouin, Michelle, 58

  Dutch language, 56

  early adopters, 73, 81

  Eckert, Penelope, 27

  Edison, Thomas, 201

  Edmont, Edmond, 18–19, 61

  eggplant emoji, 162, 164, 167, 172–73

  Eisenstein, Jacob, 23–24, 55, 185

  ellipsis points (ellipses), 96–98, 107–8, 111–13, 114, 150

  emails

  chain emails, 77, 255

  editing of, 215

  greetings in, 204–7

  as second place, 228

  third places mediated through, 223–24

  usage trends of cohorts, 89–90, 92–93, 94

  Wired Style’s discussion of, 87

  emblems, 159, 161–65

  embodiment, digital, 156–57, 185, 188, 191–93

  emoji, 155–95

  advantages of, 184

  compared to a language, 157–58

  in court cases, 193–94

  as cues about intention, 186–87, 192, 194–95

  details conveyed by, 192

  and digital embodiment, 156–57, 185, 188, 191–93

  and dynamic communication, 157

  emblem gestures, 161–65, 167, 172–73

  facial expressions, 185

  history of, 167, 173–84

  illustrative gestures, 166–68, 173

  as indication of active listening, 189–90

  most commonly used, 14

  new additions to, 182–83

  popularity of, 157, 182, 191

  and Pre Internet People cohort, 95, 98

  repetitions in, 170–72

  and Semi Internet People cohort, 90

  standardization of, 163, 181, 183

  success of, 191–92

  with taboo meanings, 162–63, 167

  term, 180

  used in combination, 168–70, 172, 173

  variation among platforms, 163, 167, 181

  and virtually hanging out, 189–90

  Emojination, 183

  Emojipedia blog, 163

  emoticons

  as cues about intention, 186–87

  emoji used in lieu of, 185

  emoji’s advantages over, 184

  and Full Internet People cohort, 83

  gender-based use of, 35

  in handwritten postcards, 97

  in Jargon File, 72

  origins of, 176–78

  and Pre Internet People cohort, 95

  and Semi Internet People cohort, 90

  and Snapchat, 164

  emotion in informal writing, conveying, 74–75, 107–8

  English language(s)

  and Arabizi, 51–55

  book metaphor for, 265–69

  and British spellings, 46–47

  and Canadian spellings/pronunciations, 40–41, 48

  displacement of other languages, 270–71

  fast rate of change in, 36–39

  Epstein, Brandon, 251

  Esperanto, 191

  ethics of internet-based research, 22

  exclamation!compounds, 131–32

  exclamation marks, 123–25

  exclamation marks, inverted, 133

  Facebook

  American adults using, 85–86

  and Cambridge Analytica controversy, 22–23

  founding population of, 79–80

  and Full Internet People cohort, 79

  name treatment for, 48

  in non-English languages, 270

  and Old Internet People cohort, 74

  and platform switching, 103

  and Post Internet People cohort, 93, 100

  and Pre Internet People cohort, 93

  real names used on, 80

  status updates on, 222, 227, 229–34

  and strong/weak ties in, 39

  third-place functions of, 228

  time spent on, 222

  usage differences among cohorts, 81

  vaguebooking on, 232–33

  Facebook Messenger, 213

  FaceTime, 94

  Fa
gyal, Zsuzsanna, 38

  Fahlman, Scott, 177, 178

  familects, 26–27, 38

  fanfiction, 262

  faxlore, 255, 256

  FidoNews, 75

  First Wave of internet people, 65–75

  Fixing English (Curzan), 45–46

  Flickr, 129

  flirting, 105–6

  flower-in-hair kaomoji, 179

  formal language/writing

  disembodied nature of, 13

  and effects of informal language use, 58

  in essays, 195

  expectations for, 14–15

  gesturing in, 12–13

  and informal/formal language mix of youth, 59–60

  punctuation of, 152

  and time to revise, 110

  forums, 68

  founder effect, 65

  Freeman, Nina, 79, 80

  friendliness, conveying, 124

  friendships on the internet, 63, 74–75

  Friendster, 103

  Full Internet People cohort, 78–84

  and context collapse issue, 103

  and email, 90, 92–93

  and memes, 246, 252

  social function of internet for, 77, 78, 82, 100, 103

  typing skills of, 122–23

  “fyi” (for your information), 72

  Gawne, Lauren, 159, 160

  Gchat, 86, 100, 213, 217

  gender, 33–35

  GeoCities, 78, 79

  geographic coordinate tags on Twitter, 23

  gesturing

  co-speech function of, 165–66

  emblem gestures, 161–65, 167, 172–73

  in formal/informal speech, 12–13

  illustrative gestures, 166–68, 173

  movement conveyed by, 192

  repetitions in (beats), 171–72

  gifs

  customization of, 14

  emblems displayed with, 164

  emoji’s advantages over, 184

  as emotional currency, 190

  as indication of active listening, 189

  Gilliéron, Jules, 18

  Gmail, 182

  Godwin, Mike, 239, 251

  Godwin’s Law, 239, 251

  Goldman, Eric, 193

  Google Docs, 49

  Google Groups, 69

  Google Hangouts, 213

  Gosling, Ryan, meme based on, 245, 247

  grammar checkers in word processors, 45–46

  Grant, Harley, 144–45

  “gr8” (great), 149

  Great Good Place, The (Oldenburg), 220

  greetings, 200–207, 235

  Grieve, Jack, 24

 

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