Sociable scholarship: The use of social media in the 21st century academy

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Date
2016
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Cristina Costa and Mark Murphy
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Copyright (c) 2016 Cat Pause, Deborah Russell. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Abstract
Social media have broken down the distance between scholars and the larger world, enabling lay people to become active participants in the construction of knowledge, through offering ideas and data, recounting experience, and engaging critically with academic research. Academics no longer operate from the safety of ivory towers: they are able to engage with a much wider audience, in a conversation rather than a lecture, through the use of Twitter, Tumblr, blogs, discussion forums, etc. These Web 2.0 tools have broadened academic spaces, enabling the participation of different voices, and addressing the academy’s commitment to social justice. Using the feminist theory of intersectionality, we explore the use of social media in academic collaboration and dissemination, and the tensions that may arise as scholars and the academy are reshaped in the 21st century.
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Journal of Applied Social Theory, 2016, 1 (1), pp. 5 - 25
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