zen

This view allows you to sort through imported content by the .

 (4020) | | ! (2) | | # (1) | | $ (2) | | & (18) | | ( (2) | | . (1) | | 0 (3) | | 1 (82) | | 2 (23) | | 3 (6) | | 4 (1) | | 5 (3) | | 6 (9) | | 7 (47) | | 8 (122) | | 9 (85) | | a (1001) | | B (1583) | | c (2442) | | d (3148) | | E (3464) | | f (711) | | g (990) | | H (2327) | | i (975) | | J (1519) | | k (720) | | L (1217) | | M (2345) | | n (1791) | | O (1552) | | p (2080) | | q (21) | | r (1279) | | S (2406) | | T (2423) | | U (797) | | v (279) | | W (1336) | | x (23) | | Y (105) | | z (244) |

I have not taken the time to reflect on blogging in quite a while. Writing for the Web has been on my mind lately, as has the act of writing with purpose and the latent networks and communities contained in each Web page.

Here's a video that sets the stage nicely--a set of fresh eyes, ears, and minds, sharing their reflections on blogging and their "business:"


Recently, Chris Brogan triggered a desire to rethink my blogging stance by posing an innocent enough question:

"How does your blog relate to your business?"

As a young educator-surveyor, I started my weblog as showcase for my writing--as a way to refine class assignments into something that could be shared with a general readership. Along the way, I have received invitations to present and publish my work based on the traffic I drew to my blog. I saw it as a value to cultivate my skills as a public intellectual, finding ways to translate my ideas into a more citizenly discourse that speaks across disciplinary boundaries and communicates with a diverse audience.

computer demands a blogUltimately, I see it as my business to blog. It permits me to circulate my research findings and those of others more broadly and to respond to contemporary issues in a thoughtful and timely manner.

So what are you blogging for? Why is it your business to blog? (Pssst... pass it on.)

 

 

 

Acknowledgments::

With much help from Henry Jenkins, Chris Brogan, Nigel Robertson, and Drew