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- Watching Each Other: Foucault’s Panopticon and Confessional in Social Media
- Big Brother: 9 Ways You’re Being Watched
- Social Media & The Digital Confessional: Full Outline
- Social Media & The Digital Confessional: Outlining a long post
- Ki Mae Heussner, “Digital Confessionals: Tweeting Away Your Vices”
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Tag Archives: stephen davenport jukuri
Watching Each Other: Foucault’s Panopticon and Confessional in Social Media
Everyone knows when we post online, we’re being watched. The NSA, the FBI, Google, Facebook, Apple, Visa, ModCloth–they monitor our online activities for patterns that indicate danger or that can teach them to market directly to us; they monitor for … Continue reading →
Posted in Watching Each Other, Writing
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Tagged andrew hope, apps, Ben Brumfield, boreal eye, confessional, confessions, corporate, Dave Alsup, dave eggers, Dennis Jarvis, digital confessional, digital humanities, digital panopticon, discipline and punish, Dustin Volz, facebook, foucault, GooglePlus, government, history of sexuality, instagram, institutions, internet, Jaedah Carty, james boyle, Jason Howie, jenny hollander, Jeremy Bentham, jessica mullen, ki mae heussner, linkedin, Mae Holland, matthew cordle, michel foucault, mitchell mcinnis, nsa, Oh-Really-Confessions, oppression, panopticon, rajagopal, Rhetoric of Respect, richard joyce, Sara Schwartz, simon copland, Simon Gibbs, SJU Secrets, Snowden, social media, St. John's University, stephen davenport jukuri, stories from the center, surveillance, the circle, third voice, Tiffany Rousculp, tom brignall iii, transparency, transparent, tweetwhatyoueat, twitter, watching each other
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Three Voices: Taking a Bit from Jukuri’s Chapter in Stories from the Center
Special Interest Group discussion in another class, Critical Issues in the Teaching of Writing: Histories, Theories and Practices of Writing Centers and One-to-One Teaching, brought me Stephen Davenport Jukuri’s chapter in Stories from the Center, “Negotiating the ‘Subject’ of Composition: Writing Centers … Continue reading →
Posted in Annotations, Watching Each Other
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Tagged acknowledgement, binary, common ground, composition, composition studies, conferencing, confessional, control, digital confessional, discourse on language, facebook, foucault, hegemony, inclination, institution, internet, jukuri, kurt spellmeyer, liminality, lynne craigue briggs, meg woolbright, myth, ncte, negotiation, possibility, queer, re-creation, rhetoric and composition, social control, social media, social subject, stephen davenport jukuri, stories from the center, subject positions, subjectivities, subjectivity, teaching, tutoring, twitter, voice, writing center, writing center studies, writing coach, writing consultant, writing teacher, writing tutor
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