Article on Counter narratives and Wikipedia
So I have been hopelessly, shamefully bad at posting to my blog. I haven't fallen off the face of the earth, just really busy with lots of different things. Here's an abstract for an essay I've just finished writing and is under review for a special issue of 'Language and Literature'. If you'd like to read the full draft, please email me.
Counter
narratives and controversial crimes: The Wikipedia article for the ‘Murder of
Meredith Kercher’
Narrative theorists
have long recognised that narrative is a selective mode of representation. There
is always more than one way to tell a story, which may alter according to its
teller, audience and the social or historical context in which the story is
told. But multiple versions of the
‘same’ events are not always valued in the same way: some versions may become
established as dominant accounts, whilst others may be marginalised or resist
hegemony as counter narratives (Bamberg and Andrews, 2004). This essay explores the potential of
Wikipedia as a site for positioning counter and dominant narratives. Through the analysis of linearity and
tellership (Ochs and Capps, 2001) as exemplified through revisions of a
particular article (‘The Murder of Meredith Kercher’), I show how structural
choices (open versus closed sequences) and tellership (single versus multiple
narrators) function as mechanisms to prioritise different dominant narratives
over time and across different cultural contexts. The case study points to the dynamic and
relative nature of dominant and counter narratives. In the ‘Murder of Meredith Kercher’ the
counter narratives of the suspects’ guilt or innocence and their position as
villains or victims depended on national context, and changed over time. The changes in the macro-social narratives
are charted in the micro-linguistic analysis of structure, citations and quoted
speech in four selected versions of the article, taken from the English and
Italian Wikipedias.
I
argue that site architecture of Wikipedia is structured in such a way to
suppress or foreground narrative controversy in different ways. The article’s front page is default view for
readers where the dominant narrative is likely to be foregrounded and
controversy is obscured. In contrast, the
talk pages document a meta-narrative of conflict between contributors as they
negotiate which material might be included in the account. Between the front page and the talk pages is
a third, liminal narrative space: the revision pages of the article. As the prior, but less visible versions of
the ongoing narrative-in-progress, the archive allows the recovery of previous
retellings, but always subordinates the polyphonic controversy of earlier
retellings to the pages hidden behind the hegemonic, superficially unified
narrative which is given precedence on the article’s main front page. In this
way, Wikipedia is able to manage the tensions of controversial narration,
simultaneously acknowledging that no single version of events can tell the
‘whole story’ of these controversial crimes (by allowing access to previous
versions of the article), but giving primary position to the version of events
most in keeping with Wikipedia’s own values of ‘Neutral Point of View’.
1 Comments:
I suppose an equally interesting topic is to see what passes as "neutral" in each case— I suppose in many cases this means "that which remains unchallenged". Which is perhaps a reflection on the local, situational and contingent nature of truth or neutrality.
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