One might imagine what would have happened to the future of the essay if Rousseau had contemplated and feared negative public response to his love of self-pleasure and resisted exploring his emotions in such a way (i.e., if he doubted whether self love would be a ?serious? topic). Or what if Cervantes took the ?novel? form of the novel so serious that he could not mock his own novel
‘s origins and purpose, as Don Quixote does in its beginning pages? Would this medium be the same as it is today?To break this sense of seriousness, academic bloggers would benefit by engaging with the potentials this medium offers writers and by allowing themselves the opportunity to experiment. In a professional environment like ours, where experimentation is typically admired elsewhere (poetry, fiction) and downplayed in our own practices (exams, dissertation writing, outcomes statements, academic publishing), finally academia has the opportunity to play with digital form, content, and genre in ways previously denied because of the difficulty of learning hypertext or setting up webspace on university servers. —Jeff Rice —Serious Bloggers (Inside Higher Ed)
SHU bloginator Karissa Kilgore, who’s been thinking quite a lot about a similar issue relating to facebook, pointed this article out to me. Thanks, Karissa!