Because these spaces (Internet sites) exist outside of the official gaze of
schools, workplaces, and governments, those who become part of them truly do
have the right to their own language. The presence of such spaces
online would mean three things: first, it would be a repudiation of much
early cyberspace theory that insisted race is and should be irrelevant
online, that it would be made irrelevant by the fluidity inherent in
online subjectivities. Second, it would confirm the importance of
discursive and rhetorical features that Smitherman links to African oral
traditions for the written discourse of African Americans...Third, it would
show Black people taking ownership of digital spaces and technologies and
point to the importance of taking Black users into account in technology user
studies.Banks stresses the importance of incorporating all races and languages, most specifically AAVE, into the Internet. It is importance to include variety on the internet becuase it allows people to freely express themselves how they see fit. Just as it was promised that the Internet would be racially unbiased, so it should be. This idea can be directly exhibited through an exerpt from the pop culture website, www.blakarazzi.com:
So I got a text message from my friend this morning at 5:00 am. She is married to a cop she said her husband got a domestic violence call Chris brown beating up on Rhianna I text her back yeah right. She said Rhianna said it was not the first time….I don’t buy it…who knows..Cops are standing outside of the Staples center waiting to arrest Brown in case he arrives, but both Brown and Rihanna cancelled their appearances at the GRAMMY's.Shitz about to go DOWN!!!
The exerpt above shows style shifting and specfic phonological features of AAVE present on the website. The passage above supports Bank's idea that language is important of the internet. Banks believed that it is important for people to "have the right to their own language" and in turn use it.
Saturday, February 21, 2009
DW2b
Race is a topic of wide debate around the globe. It can be viewed and discussed in many different venues, one of which is the Internet. The Internet provides a place where people can learn new ideas and communicate with one another. However, recently many debate that it may be more difficult for some to do so than others. One author in particular, Adam Banks makes know his opinion regarding the dismissal of "race and culture as irrelevant online". In his publication, Taking Back Technology Use Seriously: African American Discursive Traditions in the Digital Underground, Banks states:
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which phonological features are identified from the text? Can you talk a bit more about having the right to their own language? In other words, what does Banks mean by this, and how does your texting example illustrate such?
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