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12.3: Reading Social Media - Assessment

  • Page ID
    248604
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    As Bhandari and Bimo note, TikTok’s ‘For You Page’ offers users the ability to “assemble a collection of media objects that represents them and with which they identify.” As we scroll through social media content, in other words, we inevitably pick up bits and bobs of that content and incorporate them into our own persona and personhood. Unique to TikTok is a hyper-sensitive, hyper-personalized algorithm, which provides an opportunity not to be exposed to a wide net of diverse content, but rather particularized media: when scrolling, we “engage with versions of [ourselves] as mediated through the algorithm.”

    For our discussion board this week, our goal is to think Bhandari and Bimo’s argument on a personal level, investigating the ways in which our own social media engagements play into processes of self-making and identities we hold dear.

    • Navigate to the social media application you use the most (Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, etcetera). If you don’t have an app in mind, you’re welcome to engage with Youtube, which does not require you to create an account
    • Spend some time (5-10 minutes) using the app, paying particular attention to what kind of content is being served to you and what ideologies such content reinforces
    • Once you’ve spent some time engaging with your personalized feed, reflect on the following questions:
      1. Does this content demonstrate a wide variety of ideological perspectives, or does it tend to reaffirm particular ones?
      2. If I was an alien trying to get to know you, would I be able to gleam aspects of your person and personality from viewing your social media feed?
      3. In what ways does your feed accurately reflect who you are and how you see yourself?
      4. How might you challenge yourself to introduce a more diverse pool of content to your algorithm? What might be the result of this challenge?

    Your post should be at least 250 words, and, if possible, contain a link to a piece of short-form content you found particularly reflective.


    This page titled 12.3: Reading Social Media - Assessment is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Erica McCormack and Jack Lindsay.