Choosing a Social Media Platform: Genre and Social Ties in Urban Malaysia

被引:0
|
作者
Hopkins, Julian [1 ]
Tan, Chris Hooi Koon [1 ]
机构
[1] Monash Univ Malaysia, Subang Jaya, Malaysia
来源
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION | 2021年 / 15卷
关键词
social media; messaging; Malaysia; genre; social ties; scalable socialities; media switching; COMMUNICATION; AFFORDANCES; REPERTOIRE; COMMUNITY; WEAK;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号
05 ; 0503 ;
摘要
As mediated interactions using social media and messaging apps become integral to many people's lives, this article examines how urban Malaysians choose between different platforms when communicating with family, friends, and colleagues in everyday life. The concepts of "media switching" and "scalable socialities" offer explanations for platform selection based on social meaning and genre. We build on these using quantitative and qualitative data from an online survey (n = 279) and in-depth interviews that showed a predominant use of WhatsApp, while Facebook was more significant for weak ties. In the workplace, an age gap showed over-30s preferring email whereas under-30s preferred WhatsApp, demonstrating processes of remediation. We discuss how different platforms are associated with particular communicative goals and genres relating to social groups. We extend scalable socialities, suggesting that in addition to continuums of privacy and publicness, users also move between different communication platforms based on strength of ties and genre practice.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 21
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The social academic: a social capital approach to academic relationship management on social media
    Kapidzic, Sanja
    INFORMATION COMMUNICATION & SOCIETY, 2019, : 1673 - 1688
  • [42] Identifying Different Types of Social Ties in Events from Publicly Available Social Media Data
    Gupta, Jayesh Prakash
    Karkkainen, Hannu
    Menon, Karan
    Huhtamaki, Jukka
    Mukkamala, Raghava Rao
    Hussain, Abid
    Vatrapu, Ravi
    Jussila, Jari
    Pirkkalainen, Henri
    Olsson, Thomas
    KMIS: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 11TH INTERNATIONAL JOINT CONFERENCE ON KNOWLEDGE DISCOVERY, KNOWLEDGE ENGINEERING AND KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT, VOL 3: KMIS, 2019, : 176 - 186
  • [43] How do enterprise social media affordances affect social network ties and job performance?
    Chen, Xiayu
    Wei, Shaobo
    Davison, Robert M.
    Rice, Ronald E.
    INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY & PEOPLE, 2019, 33 (01) : 361 - 388
  • [44] Investigating the use of social media in intimate social relationships
    Sutcliffe, Alistair
    Dunbar, Robin
    El-Jarn, Hatana
    BEHAVIOUR & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, 2023, 42 (04) : 379 - 391
  • [45] Reentry and the Ties that Bind: An Examination of Social Ties, Employment, and Recidivism
    Berg, Mark T.
    Huebner, Beth M.
    JUSTICE QUARTERLY, 2011, 28 (02) : 382 - 410
  • [46] Geollery: A Mixed Reality Social Media Platform
    Du, Ruofei
    Li, David
    Varshney, Amitabh
    CHI 2019: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2019 CHI CONFERENCE ON HUMAN FACTORS IN COMPUTING SYSTEMS, 2019,
  • [47] Social media, media and urban transformation in the context of overtourism
    Jang, Hochan
    Park, Minkyung
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TOURISM CITIES, 2020, 6 (01) : 233 - 260
  • [48] Platform Neutrality: Solution for the Social Media War?
    Stolz, Marcel
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 16TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CYBER WARFARE AND SECURITY (ICCWS 2021), 2021, : 336 - 344
  • [49] Using social-media-network ties for predicting intended protest participation in Russia
    Kopacheva, Elizaveta
    Fatemi, Masoud
    Kucher, Kostiantyn
    ONLINE SOCIAL NETWORKS AND MEDIA, 2023, 37
  • [50] Social media impact on sustainable intention and behaviour: a comparative study between university students in Malaysia and Indonesia
    Saleh, Mohamad Saifudin Mohamad
    Mehellou, Ali
    Huang, Miao
    Briandana, Rizki
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED RESEARCH IN HIGHER EDUCATION, 2024,