04 April, 2013
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How Social Media Benefits Writing and Language
How Social Media Benefits Writing and Language
We are all aware that the
new technologies have changed the way we communicate with one another. Text
messaging and social media have dumbed down the English language with their
abbreviations, hashtags, and cutting down phrases to only letters (see you
later = CU L8r). But these changes aren’t always negative. In certain ways
these new technologies have also strengthen the English language, and a panel
discussion on the topic “Slap My Words Up:
Language in the Digital World” shows us how:
Social media
increases our awareness of mistakes and helps us prevent them. We can look at the social websites as platforms for
making errors, but we can perceive them also as platforms for catching errors.
In most cases, when you make some grammar or spelling mistake in your Facebook
posts or tweets your readers notice them and let you know in their comments or
messages so you can fix them. When you know that your social posts will reach
thousands of fans and followers and that they’ll continue spreading through the
networks even after you’ve deleted them, then you’ll most probably find the
needed time to carefully proofread your content before posting.
Helps us
differentiate as writers. The
fact that your audience is sloppy when writing on social media websites is not
a reason for you to do the same. On the contrary, you should use this
opportunity to differentiate yourself by advancing the conversations and
providing quality written content. Partial production is a characteristic of
the social media communication, but content creators can use these partial
tweet strings and posts and convert them into full stories, interactive
projects and analysis that go far beyond what a 140-character tweet can offer.
Social media
highlights the value that short storytelling brings. Social platforms like Twitter where your message is
limited to a maximum of 140 characters, or Vine videos where you only have six
seconds to tell your story and get it across are our constant reminder that
writing short and well isn’t at all easy. In fact, it takes some level of skill
to be able to do a particularly good job writing short. And if you can do it
well, know that shorter is almost always better.
Reminds us
that change is constant. The
language is constantly evolving and changing, and the new technologies
introduced throughout the history are a healthy part of this evolution. As
Paulien Dresscher, a new media research developer has said: “Just as Socrates
was concerned that the invention of writing would make people forgetful, people
today are worried about the degree to which we are permanently shaped by
digital technologies.” When we moved away from the oral culture and first started
writing, this made significant changes in the English language, and now that we
are in this post-printed era it seems like we are getting back, since the
conversational characteristics of social media resemble the oral communication
much more than the written one.
Social media
helps us create new words and find new meanings. Recent neologisms have in large part originated
through the social media websites. If a certain word or phrase is persuasive
and feels real enough, you can make it mean whatever you want it to mean. On Urban Dictionary and Wordnik you’ll even find explanations of misspelled words
that we constantly use online, like dunno, l8r or aight. The word combinations
made of brand or technology names such as googling, or tweeted, or friended,
are great examples of how social media can benefit the language.
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