Subculture
I had settled on the idea of looking at a grunge community for my ethnographic study. I must admit that I have found it pretty difficult to pick an online community for this activity.
After some pondering I think that one of the main reasons why this has been so difficult is simply down to the personal life structure that I exist in…a lot of my interests and activities are individual based. Whole segments of my hobbies / interests do not involve anybody else. The ones that do tend to be face-to-face. This is neither bad nor good…it just is! My limited experience of community had shaped the decision making process in pin-pointing a study option. Bell’s (2001) Community and Culture helps to draw lines of distinction between subcultures and communities, suggesting that virtual community structure requires that participants ‘imagine’ or self-identify with being part of the community itself.
This has got me wondering about how far common interest might be stretched to encompass this imagining?
“C’mon people now / smile on your brother /everybody get together/ try to love one another right now”
Territorial pissings – Nirvana [Nevermind] 1991
While I am certain that it is this common ground that pulls the group of individuals together I’m unconvinced that it is sufficient to create a community. How an online grunge grouping fits this description is still unclear to me. the common ground box is definitely there but how far this progressed to create community is not fully clear. I need to read and think further on this …
“how far common interest might be stretched to encompass this imagining?”
I think that’s a very good question, and definitely one you could use your fieldwork to explore. It’s absolutely fine if you come back to us and say ‘not very far’! Or some nuanced, uncertain thing. See what you can do to approach this question.