Language Blogs and Blogging

These days there are blogs for everything. One thing I enjoy seeing is that besides news, diaries, and link collections, there are also a growing number of blogs for language learning. I am not talking something like the fantastic Language Hat blog posting things related to the field of linguistics but people who are blogging as they learn a language. This takes courage and a lot of work, but I am interested to see how the blog will fit into language learning tools in the future. Two great recent finds are Hanguk Malkong and Peking Kaoya, both by the same 70 year old (?) Japanese (?) man (UPDATE: 69 Japanese year old man from Chiba prefecture known as Kazama. The former includes lots of links to news articles about Korea in Japanese along with postings for Japanese studying Korean and the latter does much the same for Chinese language with selections from resources he found online (I found his page by chance when I saw the page linked to me via some of this). There is also the older example of the Aradosh blog written by a student of Chinese language who uses his blog to practice his writing of Chinese online.

How soon I wonder, will it be before students in language classes all over are writing up their essays for class online in the form of blogs or something similar? I know my friend C. P. Sobelman, who teaches Chinese at Columbia University, has done something similar for her students, at least on one previous occasion. Whatever happens, this is an exciting time of transition as more and more people are trying to struggle with how exactly the self-publishing boom that is the blogosphere will balance, replace, or merge with various existing mediums of expression. What will be the impact on things like forums, email, or chatrooms? We may be tempted to say there is no connection and that they all fill separate niches. However, I suspect that this underestimates how our favored means of communication will shift. To take one example, some bloggers post their recent happenings on a blog to save themselves generic emails to friends. Generic emails to friends once replaced (for a lazy person like me at least) traditional letters or more frequent updates over the phone. Some people prefer being contacted on IM over getting an email. Some refuse to use voice mail and tell people in their message to send them an email. My point is simply that there is plenty of overlap and shifts among these different mediums. Personal preference will hopefully retain a diversity of means (the hand written letter is still a beautiful thing, even if I am no longer capable of writing one) but some consolidation is inevitable. Some online forms of communication, like usenet, BBS, and gopher, are not what they used to be.

Blogs are more like a chat room that one might first imagine. Many critiqued the blog as being one person singing their praises to the world, speaking to the void as it were and saying, “Read me, and thou shalt know of my thoughts.” I remember using exactly this sort of silly argument a few years ago while I dismissively rolled my eyes at a bunch of young Barnard computer techies who were huddled over their favorite livejournal site. In many ways, blogs, like the web forum or the chat room, are merely part of a grand conversation. Anyone who has spent anytime in a large chat room knows that what they say can go completely ignored. The workings of power and politics extend nicely into cyberspace with a few interesting changes. For example, in a chat room, MUDD, or other virtual environment you often have no way of knowing anything about the age, physical appearance, or background of those you are speaking with. That means that the Elephant Man himself, if eloquently spoken, or at least well tuned to the favored rhetorical tools of room, can completely dominate a discussion (This assumes that no one’s RW, or real-world reputation is known by others). There has been tons of writing on this since the internet came of age.

The same element of anonymity is also often the case for blogs, but you have convenient access to everything that person has said on their blog in the past, a whole history of written words are right there for immediate access (and if they have deleted some of them, sites like google often have a convenient cached copy). In contrast, without special logging and tracking utilities being run, a person in a chatroom can be pretend to be a Republican in one conversation and an Anarchist in the next.

The critique of blogs in fashion now focuses on the risk of it becoming a massive echo chamber with few fresh ideas and highly polarized factions. Personally, I think this ignores the extent to which communities of blogs mirror conversation in reality, or if you prefer a closer example, the written world of academia. If the world of blogs are echo chambers, so too is everything else. When I walk into a coffee shop and say, “You’ll never guess what Bush just said…” and relay to a friend what another friend has told me plus a good wallop of own commentary, I am engaging in the same sort of thing as what blogs do in great frequency online. As some theorists might have predicted, the amount of writing hasn’t decreased because we can now pass on links to each other or have better access to “all” the facts. Indeed, commentary breeds ever more commentary. Words feed on words.

5 thoughts on “Language Blogs and Blogging”

  1. I keep a blog in German called “Deutsch für Anfänger” (“German for Beginners”) with the purpose of learning speaking and writing better German (my mother tounge is Swedish). However I haven’t really found a good method of working with the blog so if you or anybody else has any good advice, please let me know! :-)

  2. Updated report from C. P. Sobelman

    Weekly Journal is a required homework, totally digitized, email transmitted.
    Laptop replaces yellow pad as a required study tool.
    The effect is multidimensional.

    There is still great resistance to allow laptops into classrooms among instructors.
    Regrettably.
    April, 2012

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