A lot of people have been talking about how they use thier journals, recently. About meaningful content vs memes vs bland recountings of daily events.

When his blog was active, William Gibson talked a fair bit about mediated personalities - how sometimes he was surprised to encounter the mediated William Gibson, and how different that person was from the self he usually related to.

What we do when we write in our livejournals is creating a mediated personality of our own - we shape how our readers see us when we pick and choose the thoughts and events in our life to write about.

If you ever thought telepathy would solve the world's problems, look at livejournal more closely - when people can read what other people are thinking, what's bugging them, etc., we tend to get Drama. As LJers progress, many of them begin to more heavily censor thier journals to avoid Drama. This tends to mean posting less about intensely personal feelings and experiences, which in turn mediates the personality that readers experience.

The person you all know as [livejournal.com profile] curgoth is not exactly the same person I think of as me.

(this may be what happens when I start reading more non-fiction humanities books, and drinking caffeine.)

From: [identity profile] witchicist.livejournal.com

Oh, oh, oh


This is one of the things I am most, most interested in. Come to my house. Drink scotch. We will be impossibly erudite! (You can even assign me a reading list!)

From: [identity profile] witchicist.livejournal.com

Re: Oh, oh, oh


Invite others, for that matter. It can be the subject of one of our 'salons'. But then somebody else might have to bring the Scotch.
.

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