by Boyda Johnstone (@BoydaJosa), a PhD Candidate in the Department of English at Fordham University. 
A few months ago, 
medieval twitter blew up. In a guest post on this blog, Dorothy Kim 
called medievalists to tweet the MLA and argued persuasively that 
“twitter, as a multimedia communication platform, functions like the 
space of marginalia in medieval manuscripts.” And Jonathan Hsy 
after #kzoo2014 posted a Buzzfeed-style article outlining 
the ways in which twitter is “not just a diversion or pastime for 
conference attendees but can actually be a useful tool.” Both bloggers 
built on the official conference-tweeting guidelines established by 
Roopika Risam before the 2014 MLA Convention. I’ve been on twitter for 
quite a few years, and after having read these posts and followed 
remotely on twitter some of the conversations at Kalamazoo, I was 
excited at the prospect of engaging in the twitter conversation during 
the New Chaucer Society biennial conference in Reykjavík, Iceland, held between 
July 16-20, 2014.
And my experience tweeting this 
conference was so much better and more enriching than I’d even 
anticipated. As a graduate student at a conference with many 
well-respected scholars, twitter allowed me to find my voice, helped me 
feel like I was part of the intellectual conversation. Discovering an 
alternative digital discussion happening across tablet, smartphone, and 
laptop; gaining new 
perspectives through the reactions and analyses of others; finding 
cross-currents and cross-connections with other panels in other rooms; gaining followers; meeting people in person who, amazingly, recognized 
my name from Twitter; feeling more confident speaking to more senior 
scholars in person due to our digital interactions.
On a
 more personal and/or practical level, twitter kept me awake and alert 
through multiple presentations, encouraged me to become a more active 
and engaged listener, helped me hone my critical and analytical skills, 
and helped me imprint ideas and arguments more firmly in my memory. I 
loved that I could follow fragments of the conversation in other panels 
as well, or catch up on panels I missed, which is important in such an 
intensely scheduled conference. Together, we NCS tweeters created a 
beautiful polyphony of fragmented, fascinated, confused, and curious 
thoughts and ideas, a multiplicity of voice and response that is 
crucial, I think, for ethical scholarship. Many of us are dedicated in 
our teaching and in our work to encouraging and uncovering active 
readerly engagement with texts, so this kind of polyphony has 
pedagogical and academic ramifications as well.
However, twitter also has its limitations, and I noticed a few problems as I 
observed the physical and virtual spaces around me. And so to the 
question: who gets a voice on twitter? As Hsy noted, not
 everyone has a twitter account, or possibly even the wireless 
technology to follow along in a session. In actual fact, the 
“multiplicity” of twitter voices was really only 15 or 20 people in a 
conference of 500, and of those 15, only a handful were tweeting 
regularly throughout the panels (though many more chimed in after the 
conference). Not everyone who has a twitter account interacts with it in
 the same way: some people need time to let arguments simmer and distil 
before they can actively respond to them, and so they can’t necessarily 
engage with sessions in real time; some people concentrate and learn 
better when just sitting and listening rather than dividing their 
attention among many different outlets; some people have political 
and/or personal objections to publicizing themselves online in such a 
way (for the NSA or future job committees to read). As much as we need 
to be listening for twitter’s variegated vocalizations online, those 
marginal responses to real-time scholarly activity, we also need to be 
listening and looking for the various degrees of silences surrounding 
the more vocal tweeters, and we should never fool ourselves into 
thinking that the sounding voices are more important than the quiet.
More
 to the point, we urgently need to maintain ‘Best Practices’ for twitter
 that exercise awareness of issues of representation, privilege, access,
 and attribution. My panel at NCS was wonderful: my paper felt good to 
deliver, the three papers spoke to each other in interesting ways, and 
we had a riveting discussion in the Q&A that left me wishing we had 
more time to talk. In short, I really couldn’t have asked for a better 
session. However, if you search the hashtags #ncs14 and #6d, you will 
find...nothing.
According to twitter, this productive session on Chaucer’s House of Fame—and its 
shimmering, vanishing surfaces of ice and glass—didn’t even happen, an 
ephemeral event that, if the future archive depended solely on the 
Library of Congress’s official twitter catalog, will be completely 
forgotten. While I fear this complaint may sound whiny or like a kind of
 humble-brag, it is simply a fact that I am a graduate student being 
trained in a struggling profession, and the future is uncertain. I would
 ideally like to secure a permanent, nonprecarious job, and if we are 
increasingly depending on twitter as an outlet for recognition and 
remembrance, the twitter archive of conferences such as this one is 
important to me.
On the other hand, if someone had been 
tweeting my paper and panel, there are a few guidelines I would have 
wanted that person to follow; for the other harsh reality is, we young 
scholars at a prestigious conference need to be careful not to allow our
 ideas to slip out of our hands, to lose their attribution and find 
homes somewhere else. One great thing about conference twitter etiquette
 is that if one’s ideas are properly cited, they are henceforth archived
 and remembered as yours, not someone else’s. And at this
 conference, I noticed that not everyone was observing 
such best practices: ideas and individual 
tweets were still floating around on twitter without attribution to 
their progenitor, mostly due I think to oversights and 
overexcitement (I even found myself doing this once or twice as well, admittedly). I think I speak for all graduate students and young 
scholars present at this conference when I say that this loss of 
attribution is a hugely pressing concern.
So, I’d like 
to outline and reiterate, firstly, one thing that I think needs to 
happen on Twitter during conferences such as NCS, and secondly, six 
things that should happen to ensure ethical scholarly practices, for 
students and faculty all. While Hsy, Kim, and Risam have already 
outlined most of these guidelines, they bear repeating from the 
perspective of an emerging young scholar. I welcome any further 
additions, objections, or insights.
What needs to 
happen: with a few understandable exceptions, every single tweet must 
contain named attribution to at least the last name of the presenter of 
the idea (formats such as “[tweet proper] [#conference #session] [last 
name pinned to the end]” are fine, though it is best if the first tweet 
contains a fuller statement of who is presenting, followed by briefer 
attributions later). This means that if you choose to tweet a number of 
the presenters’ (or questioners’) ideas in a row, every single tweet 
should contain the name of the idea’s progenitor. Imagine what would 
happen if one unattributed tweet amongst many suddenly went viral: 
suddenly it is the tweeter, not the presenter, who receives the credit. 
Scholarly chaos ensues (....no, but really.). If you are adding your own
 ideas to a presentation or tweeting a thought completely your own, make
 that clear (eg. “Brown says X, and I would add Y” or “I wonder what 
Brown would make of Z”). This is no different than citing and grappling 
with the ideas of others in our scholarly work, and should not be 
difficult.
What should happen:
1.     Try not to 
overtweet. Others have said that tweeting is like note-taking, but I 
would complicate this notion a little bit; note-taking tends to be much 
more profuse than the summative actions of tweeting should be. Be aware,
 when tweeting, that the scholars whose ideas you are reproducing may 
not be thrilled to have every single point they make in their 
laboriously constructed paper haphazardly flung across the internet, 
attribution or no (and they might not think or wish to announce this 
preference at the beginning of their talk, as it might seem overly 
defensive and set a bad tone). While I wish my paper had received an 
enthusiastic tweet or two, I do not wish that the entire thing had been 
published online in 140-character portions. Again, the currency of the 
idea is volatile and unstable, and issues of consent and ownership are 
at play here, especially for young scholars.
2.     Be 
aware of other tweeters. When choosing to tweet in real-time, follow the
 session and conference hashtags and observe what other people are 
saying. Twitter is supposed to be a dialogue, not a monologue, and as 
such you should listen to the multiplicity of voices around you; 
remember Kenneth Burke’s famous claim that when entering into 
conversation, you should “listen for a while, until you decide that you 
have caught the tenor of the argument; then you put in your oar.” One of
 the most exciting twitter experiences I had at this conference occurred
 when I and co-tweeters in a different session, in a different room, 
realized that we were having parallel discussions about manuscript 
paleography/codicology that could speak to one another in productive 
ways. This new awareness could trigger further conversations and 
cross-pollination of ideas outside the panel sessions, and would not 
have occurred if we weren’t looking and listening for the tweets of 
others as well as our own.
3.     Be respectful of the 
physical space you inhabit as you are tweeting online. Try to maintain a
 courteous posture (ie. do not bend far over the table on your phone 
lest you resemble a bored, texting undergraduate), try to make eye 
contact with the speaker, take manual notes perhaps, try to convey a 
sense that you are at least as much present in the room as you are 
present online. Remember, again, that not everyone tweets, not everyone 
has read the previously cited manifestos on conference tweeting, not 
everyone is technologically savvy. I have heard stories of people in 
sessions becoming offended at the tweeting postures of others, 
perceiving them as rudeness; and although I don’t want to victim-blame, 
being aware of your physical body as you tweet communicates respect to 
the diversity of persons around you—including the speaker—and minimizes 
misinterpretation of your twitter-stance as rudeness or boredom.
4.
     Be aware of which panels are and aren’t being represented. The degree of panel 
representation depends in large part upon who happens to be sitting in 
the room and how prolific of a tweeter he/she is. If one panel or paper 
is tweeted more than another, that panel or paper receives 
disproportionate representation online. I don’t fully know how to remedy
 this problem, but I wonder if, in the future, there should be an 
official “Tweeter” stationed in every room (or perhaps a job for the 
moderator) so that every panel and/or paper receives at least one or two
 summative and/or representative tweets. Until that day, just look 
around you and observe whose ideas are being tweeted and whose aren’t, 
and consider actively seeking out an underrepresented panel to broadcast
 it online.
5.     Be aware that tweets cannot encompass complex arguments. In one of the most well-attended sessions at NCS,
 8A on the question of the “Agential Object” in critical theory, an audience member
 (unfortunately and somewhat hypocritically I don’t know who it was!) 
pointed out that one of the problems with new methodologies is that we 
as scholars tend to want to translate them into functional machines that
 allow us to pump out scholarship and articles as fast as possible. 
Similarly, when tweeting, we must be aware of the dangers of 
domesticating complex ideas into facile 140-character boxes. Judith Butler, in her 
essay “Ordinary, Incredulous” in The Humanities and Public Life (Fordham UP, 2014), argues that we need to be wary of 
breaking down complex arguments into the language of instrumentality, 
because that kind of simplification can cheapen and indeed betray our 
very calling as critical humanities scholars. To avoid this problem, 
treat tweets as imperfect containers of ideas that—as panel 10D on “Monument, Edifice, Container,” organized by Elaine Treharne and Noelle 
Phillips, taught us in regard to medieval manuscripts—possess fragments,
 ruptures, limitations, even as they present exciting possibilities for 
distilling ideas into graspable and memorable bits.
6.  
   Finally, with this last problem in mind, be aware of the form of your
 tweet. As this is the first time I have ever tweeted a conference or 
panel, I don’t entirely feel like I have the authority to say this, but 
in my opinion a good conference tweet contains both local and global (or
 specific and general) components. Local so that there’s something 
educative or some substance for your claim, but global so that outsiders
 looking in—and those whose twitter-feed is currently being bombarded by
 tweets from excitable Chaucerians—might derive some kind of general 
application from our conferencing. Don’t fill your tweets—at least not 
all of them—with esoteric facts and alienating coded details. Tweets 
with general instead of or as well as specific content help avoid the 
problem, mentioned above, of overexposing the intimate details of 
someone else’s argument. And also, tweets with general instead of or as 
well as specific content are arguably more fun and engaging to read.
This
 last suggestion brings me to my final point, as the question of how we 
present ourselves on twitter to the wider world is, again, about 
privilege and voicing: we scholars at this exotic academic conference 
(if I may include myself amongst this group), some of whom have letters 
after our names and stable institutional positions, are always already 
privileged by the very nature of being here, and by nature of belonging 
to institutions that in many cases still support such expensive events. 
As much as we’d like to believe that it is the virtue of our scholarship
 that has brought us to such a place, in actual fact there are powers 
and institutions that have contributed to bringing us here, that have 
given us a voice. Using twitter as a digital resource means that we are 
not only speaking to other people at the conference, but also to those 
who could not make it, who were not accepted, who have been cast outside
 the academic institution, who deride the academic institution, who have
 no interest in the academic institution, or who have never been able to
 get into the academic institution for various personal, material, 
political, geographic, or economic reasons. And as we are increasingly 
called (rightly) to make our work legible to audiences outside the ivory
 tower, and (less rightly, perhaps) to justify our work to such 
institutes as funding organizations, we need to become more conversant 
in how to package our ideas for the looking and listening nonacademics 
around us who, well, may not fully understand this weird and wild field 
of medieval literature. This stuff is going online, friends, and others 
are listening: please be aware of who is getting a voice.
*I am grateful to Zachary Hines, University of Texas, for his valuable feedback on this entry. 

 
 
3 comments:
Thanks so much for posting this, Boyda (and great that we finally got a chance to meet IRL at NCS, by the way!). Lots of great stuff here, and one of the most practical ideas I like here is the idea of a "designated tweeter" at sessions so more of them get represented in the conference's twitter-presence... I think the question of who/what gets tweeted is increasingly important; we want the online spaces to be multi-vocal and to do the best we can to amplify voices that aren't as often heard/acknowledged. Our efforts to have more guest-postings at ITM are part of this too! Thanks so much for this.
Thanks so much, Jonathan! (sorry just saw this, not sure when you posted it; and great to meet you IRL as well!) I thought your earlier article was excellent and I'm excited to tweet future conferences with you :).
Pretty sure we met in person after simul-tweeting one session or another :-) Good points here!
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