[Air-L] boilerplate email message research
Marj Kibby
Marj.Kibby at newcastle.edu.au
Mon Oct 29 13:39:48 PDT 2007
New Media & Society, Vol. 7, No. 6, 770-790 (2005)
Email forwardables: folklore in the age of the internet
Marjorie D. Kibby
Email communication fosters an environment where messages have an inherent ‘truth value’ while at the same time senders have reduced inhibitions about the types of messages sent. When this is combined with a convenience and ease of communication and an ability to contact huge numbers of people simultaneously, email becomes a rapid and effective distribution mechanism for gossip, rumour and urban legends. Email has enabled not only the birth of new folklore, but also the revival of older stories with contemporary relevance and has facilitated their distribution on an unprecedented scale.
Regards,
Marj
Dr Marjorie Kibby,
Senior Lecturer in Communication & Culture
Faculty of Education and Arts
The University of Newcastle, Callaghan NSW 2308 Australia
Marj.Kibby at newcastle.edu.au
+61 2 49216604
>>> julie dare <jsdare at ozemail.com.au> 10/29/07 11:51 PM >>>
Hi
Can anyone advise of research or references on the social use of
'boilerplate' or prefabricated email messages - the messages containing
jokes, sayings, cute messages etc. (not spam) that get forwarded on from
person to person. The only direct reference I can find is the Boneva and
Kraut article, Using e-mail for personal relationships: The difference
gender makes, in The American Behavioral Scientist, November 2001.
Many thanks
Julie Dare
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