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The paper uses data from blogs maintained by people of
Indian origin to demonstrate that the process of entering a
blogsphere can help to re-create in cybernetic space, the
original real space left behind producing the phenomenon of
“glocalization” where the global and the local can dwell
together. It is increasingly the case that many people who
would call themselves “Indian” or “of Indian origin” dwells
in an emerging synthetic cybernetic space that is produced at
the intersection of real geographic space and virtual
cyberspace. Thus, Indians in New York spend time visiting
virtual temples and Indians in Delhi spend time in call
centers virtually living in the USA. In this paper, the focus
will be on considering the way in which Indians in the global
real space are spending increasingly more time in localized
cybernetic space. This is done by using theories related to
the new technologies and relating them to the understanding
of diaspora – the condition of place-less-ness – that is
increasingly a common phenomenon. The specific technology
being considered is the use of Web logs, or blogs,
which is one of the fastest growing phenomenon on the
Internet at the beginning of the twenty-first century.
This is possible by beginning with the premise that the
Internet can be considered as a discursive “space” which is
composed of numerous discourses that are strung together with
the use of a rhizomatic network of computers that are
constantly being scaled up. As a result, there are millions
of web pages that contain almost infinite number of texts and
they remain hyperlinked together creating a discursive
infrastructure whose physical location is nearly impossible
to pinpoint and map, but whose presence is felt the moment
one accesses the discourse using a networked computer. Blogs
are increasingly a significant component of this discursive
space. As I have discussed in the paper presented in Ethicomp
2004, a reader entering this discursive space may find it a
comforting place because it produces a safe place (Mitra,
2004). Here the reader can enter into a dialog through the
use of blogs. Like other components of the Internet, the blog
offers the opportunity for people to use their own voice,
through the texts and discourse they create, to produce the
identity of the blogger who is located in the “glocal” space.
Eventually, the readers of blogs move into the space created
by the blogger when they read a blog. To many readers finding
this space is particularly critical because the spaces
created by the blogs could be ones that the reader was once
familiar with but has perhaps become distant from, for
instance, through a process of migration. Thus, I would argue
that blogs can play a crucial role in the diasporic
experience where people find themselves moving away from
familiar places and having to live in new places. In such
cases, blogs can help to recreate the space that has been
relinquished.
Evidence for this can be found in blogs maintained by
people of Indian origin. There are several reasons for
selecting to work with people of Indian origin. First, in
most cases, people from India who are blogging are most
likely to use the lingua franca of the Internet – English.
Next, like many other developing countries, India is
witnessing an increasing warming of relationship with the
West. This has resulted in larger number of people from India
traveling globally. Some travel away as immigrants albeit
with close ties with India while others could be sojourners
who are only away for long enough to develop an yearning for
home and the desire to remain connected to India during their
time away from home. The movement of people is creating the
emergent Indian diaspora for whom the need to remain
connected is particularly critical.
Often technologies such as the blog can help to alleviate
some of those challenges by offering a space where people can
find the voices of others who either represent similar
anxieties or offer tales of a familiar real place that can
often be comforting. The new technology of the blog has made
this peculiarly possible because, unlike Web pages that are
often institutionally maintained, blogs represent personal
voices of people who are speaking for themselves as opposed
to being spoken for by others. Thus the voices that create
the spaces are accentuated with personal and ideological
overtones that can provide a very special image of a place
which the readers might never find in Web pages or other
forums. Furthermore, the blogs not only represent the voices
of the speakers who are creating the discourse of the blog,
but these voices often are connected with many other voices
that appear together. Indeed it is this network of voices
made up of many bloggers, as well as those who respond to
blogs that creates the sense of place that the readers can
enter. These voices are also unlike e-mails and instant
messages since blogs send the personal message to a large and
anonymous audience unlike the personal message systems that
have a limited and known audience.
This paper examines a series of blogs and shows how the
discursive process is used by people of Indian origin to
voice themselves and thus create a sense of place. The blogs
are drawn from many different sources and are written by
people who are physically in India as well as by people who
are outside the country. A narrative analysis is used to show
the different ways in which the blogs create senses of space,
identity and nationality.
References
Mitra, A. (2004). Towards finding a cybernetic safe place:
Illustrations from People of Indian Origin. Proceedings of
the Ethicomp 04. |