September 26, 2003

Blogging: It's A Sub-Culture

Argh. Blogging is developing into a subculture with its own argot. No, no, no, that is not what I want. This isn’t high school. I don’t need a clique to make me feel good. I want to take part in thoughtful conversations that leak into the public sphere.

On the other hand, Technorati.com claims to know of 994,254 weblogs (that should hit a million by next week), with 45,043,270 active links. At worst, that’s a substantial sub-culture.

But, fun as terms like “Bleg,” “Blogroach,” “Fisk”, “Idiotarian,” or “Instapundit” may be, I don’t think I am going to have much use for most blogging jargon. I hope to write as straightforward prose as I can, subject to the occasional need to express complex ideas and nuance, and of course to systemic sleep deprivation.


Posted by Michael : September 26, 2003 09:20 AM | Blogs | TechnoLinks
Slashdot   Slashdot It!
Comments

To the best of my knowledge, I have never used the terms “Bleg,” “Blogroach,” “Fisk” or “Idiotarian.” I try to use the term "Glenn Reynolds" rather than "Instapundit."

Posted by: Brad DeLong at September 26, 2003 10:44 AM

I wouldn't take that lexicon very seriously. There are a few terms that seem to be widely used, like "blogosphere," but a large number of the words and phrases on that Samizdata list appear to reflect their views and agendas, not those of the weblog world in general.

Not that there's anything wrong with that. But it does mean their lexicon is best viewed as a work of propaganda.

Posted by: Patrick Nielsen Hayden at September 26, 2003 05:12 PM


Add Discourse.net to your RSS/RDF/XML reader: Full feed

Powered by Movable Type 2.64.


   out of