4.8 • 4.4K Ratings
🗓️ 1 March 2021
⏱️ 83 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
The internet has made it so much easier for people to talk to each other, in a literal sense. But it hasn’t necessarily made it easier to have rewarding, productive, good-faith conversations. Here I talk with sociologist Rod Graham about what kinds of conversations the internet does enable, and should enable, and how we can work to make them better. We discuss both how social media are used for nefarious purposes, from cyberbullying to driving extremism, but also how they can be mobilized for more lofty goals. We also get into some of the lost nuances in conventional discussions of race, including how many minorities are more culturally conservative than an oversimplified narrative would lead us to believe, and the tricky relationship between online discourse and social cohesion.
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Roderick Graham received his Ph.D. in sociology from the City University of New York. He is currently an Associate Professor of Sociology and Criminal Justice at Old Dominion University, and serves as the coordinator of the university’s Cybercriminology Bachelor’s program. He is the author of The Digital Practices of African-Americans.
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0:00.0 | Hello everyone, welcome to the Mindscape Podcast. |
0:02.9 | I'm your host, Sean Carroll. |
0:04.6 | This thing that is going on right now, |
0:06.7 | right this very second as you're listening to my voice |
0:09.1 | in some device, is enabled by technology, right? |
0:12.8 | There were no podcasts 20 years ago. |
0:14.5 | When I was a kid, we didn't have your podcast and so forth. |
0:17.6 | The internet, cyberspace, whatever you want to call it, |
0:19.9 | has enabled an enormous number of ways |
0:23.1 | that people can communicate with or at each other |
0:27.6 | that were simply unheard of before. |
0:29.4 | You have not only podcasts, you have YouTube videos, |
0:32.1 | you have social media, you have blogs |
0:34.4 | and online magazines and so forth. |
0:36.7 | The ability to communicate one way or the other |
0:40.2 | is vastly larger, the capacity I should say, |
0:43.2 | vastly larger than it ever has been before. |
0:45.9 | This does not, as many of you will be familiar with, |
0:48.9 | necessarily mean that the quality of communication has gone up. |
0:54.6 | In fact, it's very clear that in some cases, |
0:57.8 | in some circumstances, this ability to communicate |
1:02.2 | has been used to what we would think of as nefarious ends, |
... |
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