[Air-l] Community and our Conceptual Lexicon
Ellis Godard
ellis.godard at csun.edu
Fri Aug 4 10:09:20 PDT 2006
Ian Goodwin wrote:
> ...community has always been tied to normative
> prescription as well as empirical description. Yet the most
> important point about community is that it pervades everyday
> life. I'd go so far as to say it seems to be indispensable to
> social discourse.
That's pretty far.
> Thus, as Peter Hamilton put it in his
> perceptive introduction to Cohen's (1985) classic study (The
> Symbolic Construction of Community), community would have
> long ago been "discounted as grist to the scholarly mill were
> it not for the remarkable hold that the idea of community
> exerts over both the intellectual and popular mind" (p.7).
The popularity of a notion, within or beyond scholarship, is a poor criteria for the evaluation of its use in describing anything other than its popularity.
> It is for this reason we should be careful about discounting
> community. People manifestly believe in community and use the
> term in their everyday discourse. In this sense community
> motivates, sustains, and structures social action.
By what logic does the publicly consequential nature of a term render it having descriptive or explanatory value?
> ...For example fears of 'community decline', whilst
> difficult if not impossible to verify from an objective
> perspective, often motivate residents of localities to become
> involved in online initiatives (and structure how they then
> interact online - the topics they deem 'relevant', the goals
> of the online group etc) - this was certainly the case in the
> community informatics initiatives I studied in Birmingham (UK).
Fears of goblins do not goblins make.
-eg
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