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Writing to (re)New Orleans: The post-Hurricane Katrina blogosphere and its ability to inspire recovery

Posted on:2011-08-11Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of South FloridaCandidate:Pignetti, DaisyFull Text:PDF
GTID:1447390002455583Subject:Speech communication
Abstract/Summary:
Nearly every website or software application these days features a feed to subscribe to, a network to join, or a social timeline to track---all of which do their part to influence public opinion, promote products, and bring people closer together. Being a blogger since 2003 exposed me to these user-generated trends, but never did I expect my blog space, or any others, to play such an important role in my emotional well-being; not until Hurricane Katrina hit. Sharing my story as a transplanted New Orleanian watching the disaster unfold from afar in a public forum quickly linked me to other local voices, and soon I discovered a burgeoning "Big Easy" blogosphere.;This dissertation thus illustrates how online communications have the ability to evolve into cathartic and socially responsible exchanges during and after times of disaster. Relying on qualitative research methods, I first discuss existing kinds of texts (news reports, comments on news sites, print publications, oral histories, etc.) to offer a picture of how Hurricane Katrina appeared and was treated by various traditional media. I then shift focus to digital spaces, featuring profiles of various New Orleans bloggers that I compiled through a series of interviews and analysis of their perpetual posting of blog entries, photos, videos, and status updates. I conclude their writing is a shared social experience with the Internet offering multiple platforms across which they can resist the debilitating effects of trauma and present their audiences with a deeper, truer understanding of what life is like in post-Katrina New Orleans.
Keywords/Search Tags:New orleans, Katrina
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