https://www.loc.gov/collections/web-cultures-web-archive/
"The Web Cultures Web Archive includes sites documenting the creation and sharing of emergent cultural traditions on
the web. The mission of the American Folklife Center is to document traditional cultural forms and practices, and
the proliferation of smart phones, tablets, and wireless Internet connections has positioned networked
communication as a space where people increasingly develop and share folklore. This collection, co-curated with
scholars who study digital culture, captures a set of websites that document elements of the various digital
vernaculars enabled through networked and computer-mediated communication. These sites comprise a wide range of
everyday communication enacted by communities to create a shared sense of the world: reaction GIFs, image macros
and memes; online communities that have established, shaped and disseminated communication tropes and themes; sites
that document, establish and/or define vernacular language, such as Leet and Lolspeak, or icon-based
communications, such as emoji; sites connected to DIY (do it yourself) movements of crafting and making; sites
focused on documentation, development, proliferation, distribution and discussion of digital “urban legends” and
lore, such as Creepypasta; and sites that focus on the development and dissemination of vernacular creative forms,
such as fan fiction. The Web Cultures Web Archive offers a representative sampling of the collective cultural
creation and self-documentation characterizing vernacular spaces on the World Wide Web, and, like many of those
spaces, is in process. The American Folklife Center will continue to add to these collections, developing archival
holdings that reflect the dynamic nature of the web itself."
Keine Kommentare:
Kommentar veröffentlichen