Beyond the blog: The networked self of travel bloggers on Twitter

Studies of the use of social media in tourism rarely discuss various tools in conjunction with each other. The growth of Twitter has attracted the attention of tourism researchers interested in the platform as a marketing tool and a source of information about consumers (Claster, Cooper, & Salli...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Azariah, Deepti
Other Authors: A. Henderson
Format: Conference Paper
Published: ANZCA 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pandora.nla.gov.au/pan/31914/20111212-1004/www.anzca.net/download-document/478-azariah-anzca-2011.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/26537
_version_ 1848752014872281088
author Azariah, Deepti
author2 A. Henderson
author_facet A. Henderson
Azariah, Deepti
author_sort Azariah, Deepti
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Studies of the use of social media in tourism rarely discuss various tools in conjunction with each other. The growth of Twitter has attracted the attention of tourism researchers interested in the platform as a marketing tool and a source of information about consumers (Claster, Cooper, & Sallis, 2010; Hay, 2010). Similar studies of travel blogs largely focus on what tourists say about destinations and their own experiences (Akehurst, 2009; Bosangit, McCabe, & Hibbert, 2009; Schmallegger &Carson, 2008). Blogs in general, and travel blogs in particular, are widely regarded as providing credible information about their authors. Both the content and formal features of these online narratives shape the self-presentation and positioning of their authors as bloggers. Given that blogs are increasingly “distributed” (Helmond, 2010) and that independent travel bloggers often link to other platforms, it is necessary to consider author-created content beyond the blog to understand the presentation of what Papacharissi (2010) calls a “networked self”. Drawing on the theories of Bakhtin and Goffman, which have informed previous analyses of blogs, and Dann’s (1996) concept of tourist discourse, this paper argues that the Twitter pages of independent travel bloggers extend the self-presentation in their blogs.In particular, it focuses on how travel bloggers use specific conventions, formal features, and narrative techniques of Twitter to express a networked self and reiterate themes of the blog. Through a random selection and textual analysis of various messages it finds that while there is some mention of the travel experience, the various conventions and conversations on Twitter are self-presentational elements that generally strengthen the authors’ position as travel bloggers. The characteristic narrative techniques of Twitter also reveal tensions between the discourses of travel and tourism. The networked self of the independent travel blogger is negotiated in these discursive tensions.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T08:01:53Z
format Conference Paper
id curtin-20.500.11937-26537
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T08:01:53Z
publishDate 2011
publisher ANZCA
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-265372017-01-30T12:53:55Z Beyond the blog: The networked self of travel bloggers on Twitter Azariah, Deepti A. Henderson twitter travel internet blogs Studies of the use of social media in tourism rarely discuss various tools in conjunction with each other. The growth of Twitter has attracted the attention of tourism researchers interested in the platform as a marketing tool and a source of information about consumers (Claster, Cooper, & Sallis, 2010; Hay, 2010). Similar studies of travel blogs largely focus on what tourists say about destinations and their own experiences (Akehurst, 2009; Bosangit, McCabe, & Hibbert, 2009; Schmallegger &Carson, 2008). Blogs in general, and travel blogs in particular, are widely regarded as providing credible information about their authors. Both the content and formal features of these online narratives shape the self-presentation and positioning of their authors as bloggers. Given that blogs are increasingly “distributed” (Helmond, 2010) and that independent travel bloggers often link to other platforms, it is necessary to consider author-created content beyond the blog to understand the presentation of what Papacharissi (2010) calls a “networked self”. Drawing on the theories of Bakhtin and Goffman, which have informed previous analyses of blogs, and Dann’s (1996) concept of tourist discourse, this paper argues that the Twitter pages of independent travel bloggers extend the self-presentation in their blogs.In particular, it focuses on how travel bloggers use specific conventions, formal features, and narrative techniques of Twitter to express a networked self and reiterate themes of the blog. Through a random selection and textual analysis of various messages it finds that while there is some mention of the travel experience, the various conventions and conversations on Twitter are self-presentational elements that generally strengthen the authors’ position as travel bloggers. The characteristic narrative techniques of Twitter also reveal tensions between the discourses of travel and tourism. The networked self of the independent travel blogger is negotiated in these discursive tensions. 2011 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/26537 http://pandora.nla.gov.au/pan/31914/20111212-1004/www.anzca.net/download-document/478-azariah-anzca-2011.pdf ANZCA fulltext
spellingShingle twitter
travel
internet
blogs
Azariah, Deepti
Beyond the blog: The networked self of travel bloggers on Twitter
title Beyond the blog: The networked self of travel bloggers on Twitter
title_full Beyond the blog: The networked self of travel bloggers on Twitter
title_fullStr Beyond the blog: The networked self of travel bloggers on Twitter
title_full_unstemmed Beyond the blog: The networked self of travel bloggers on Twitter
title_short Beyond the blog: The networked self of travel bloggers on Twitter
title_sort beyond the blog: the networked self of travel bloggers on twitter
topic twitter
travel
internet
blogs
url http://pandora.nla.gov.au/pan/31914/20111212-1004/www.anzca.net/download-document/478-azariah-anzca-2011.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/26537