生活在/差异;或者,如何想象矛盾网络

C. Albrecht, Wendy H. Chun, L. Kurgan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:在1954年的一篇文章中,保罗·拉扎斯菲尔德和罗伯特·k·默顿创造了“同质性”一词来描述基于相似性的友谊。他们的研究结果基于美国一个混血儿住房项目中邻居之间的友谊模式,对社会过程进行了定量和定性、实证和推测相结合的分析。从那时起,同质性就成为了网络科学的指导原则:人们简单地认为,相似性产生了联系。但默顿、帕特里夏·s·韦斯特和玛丽·贾霍达未发表的研究——拉扎斯菲尔德和默顿的分析的基础——以及默顿和应用社会研究局的档案揭示了一个更复杂的情况。本文利用档案中的数据痕迹,重新想象是什么让所研究的住房项目的居民像邻居一样生活在不同的环境中。这些档案的重现揭示了我们想象中的网络常常违反直觉的特征:它们是关于移除,而不是添加。它还为数字未来开辟了新的想象可能性,超越了对不同和在线回音室的仇恨。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Living In/difference; or, How to Imagine Ambivalent Networks
Abstract:In a 1954 essay Paul Lazarsfeld and Robert K. Merton coined the term homophily to describe similarity-based friendship. They based their findings on friendship patterns among neighbors in a biracial housing project in the United States, using a combined quantitative and qualitative, empirical and speculative analysis of social processes. Since then homophily has become a guiding principle for network science: it is simply presumed that similarity breeds connection. But the unpublished study by Merton, Patricia S. West, and Marie Jahoda, which grounds Lazarsfeld and Merton’s analysis, and the Merton and Bureau of Applied Social Research’s archive reveal a more complex picture. This article engages with the data traces in the archive to reimagine what enabled the residents of the studied housing project to live in difference, as neighbors. The reanimation of this archive reveals the often counterintuitive characteristic of our imagined networks: they are about removal, not addition. It also opens up new imagined possibilities for a digital future beyond the hatred of the different and online echo chambers.
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