Blogging is great, but it sometimes feels like every blog is an island. To have a robust blog society requires connection, community, conversation. Part of the problem is we don’t have many great ways to connect blogs together into larger conversation structures.
Sure we have hyperlinks, and even some esoteric magic with the likes of webmentions. But I want big, simple, legible ways to link blog discussions together. I want: blogging megastructures!
In practice, building massive infrastructure is not only very difficult, but incredibly hard to maintain (and also thus generally expensive). Who exactly is going to maintain such structures?
I would argue that Webmentions aren’t esoteric, particularly since they’re a W3C recommendation with several dozens of server implementations including support for WordPress, Drupal, and half a dozen other CMSes.
Even if your particular website doesn’t support them yet, you can create an account on webmention.io to receive/save notifications as well as to send them manually.
–November 17, 2019 at 02:14PM
Cabinet: one author or several; posts curated into particular collections or series’, often with thematic groupings, perhaps a “start here” page for new readers, or other pointers to specific reading sequences
Colin Walker has suggested something like this in the past and implemented a “required reading” page on his website.
–November 17, 2019 at 02:18PM
Chain: perhaps the simplest collaborative blogging form; a straightforward back and forth exchange of posts exploring a particular topicMesh: like a chain, but with multiple participants; still a legible structure e.g. alternating / round-robin style, but with more possibilities for multiplicity of perspectives and connections across postsFractal: multiple participants and multi-threaded conversation; more infinite game branching; a possibly ever-evolving and mutating conversation, so could probably use some kind of defined endpoint, maybe time-bound
In the time I’ve been using Webmentions, I’ve seen all of these sorts of structures using them. Of particular interest, I’ve seen some interesting experiments with Fragmentions that allow one to highlight and respond to even the smallest fragments of someone’s website.
–November 17, 2019 at 02:20PM
I tend to think of blogging as “thinking out loud”, a combination of personal essay, journaling, brainstorming and public memo.
Another example in the wild of someone using a version of “thinking out loud” or “thought spaces” to describe blogging.
–November 17, 2019 at 02:25PM
Baroque, brutalist, Borgesian — let’s build some blogging megastructures.
Take a peek at https://indieweb.xyz/ which is a quirky and interesting example of something along the lines of the blogging megastructure you suggest.
–November 17, 2019 at 02:27PM
A learning adventure exploring alternative forms of blogging
This course is a group odyssey around a simple question: how can we expand upon blogging as a medium?
Blogging dead, long live blogging!
Enrollment
All you need is a way to publish a post! A blog works best but you don’t need one to enroll. There are many great anonymous publishing platforms out there like Write.as, text.fyi, and Telegraph.
Structure
The course is structured like a giant ongoing discussion made through blog posts. Each week there will be a prompt post which will include some questions and resources to riff off of. They can be found in the blogchain towards the bottom.
When writing, simply add a link to this post at the beginning/end so others can join in. You could do something like this:
Part of the Blogging Futures course blogchain. Feel free to join!
Once your post is published, you will want to add it to the blogchain so others can read and participate in the developing conversation. You can add your post to the blogchain through this form:
(If the app is ever down, just respond with a link to your post on this thread and I will make sure to add your post to the chain!)
Once submitted, your post will appear below. You are not limited to a number of posts per week, so feel free to write as much as possible. Since the goal is to have a developing conversation across posts, linking to others in the thread and responding to their thoughts is encouraged.
Happy writing!
Blogchain
10/30 to 11/6 – Prompt 1 – Paradigms
CJ Eller, Community of Gardens
Tom Critchlow, New Blogging 2 – Open Blogchains
Jared, Paradigms for blogging social infrastructure
Brendan Schlagel, Proposal for Near-Future Blogging Megastructures
CJ Eller, Towards an ethos
Azlen Elza, Writing as Distilled Thought
11/6 to 11/13 – Prompt 2 – Infrastructure
Anonymous, An Infrastructure of Paper
CJ Eller, Infrastructure for Infrastructures
Jared, Sociotechnical and technosocial infrastructure
11/13 to 11/24 – Prompt 3 – Reflection
Chris Aldrich, On Blogging Futures
CJ Eller, Tinkering
Chris Aldrich, Thoughts and annotations on Brendan Schlagel’s Proposal for Near-Future Blogging Megastructures
Chris Aldrich, Brief response to Prompt 3 – Reflection
Chris Aldrich, Thoughts and annotations on CJ Eller’s Tinkering
CJ Eller, Loosely Joined
Chris Aldrich, Read “An ongoing conversation” by Colin Walker
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