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Why do or did they log on? Why are tumblr users and tumblr scholars so sure, when they say that tumblr is special and played a key role in the digital culture of the past decade? A strong pattern emerges from qualitative, immersive research. Conversations around fandom (Bourlai 2018; Burton 2019; Hillman et al. 2014), feminism (Connelly 2015; Keller 2019), LGBTQIA+2 experiences (Byron 2019; Cho 2015a; Feraday 2016; Fink and Miller 2014; Haimson et al. 2019; Oakley 2016), and NSFW topics (Mondin 2017; Tiidenberg 2014a, 2020; Tiidenberg and van der Nagel 2020) are all highly visible on tumblr. So are the users’ commitments to social justice (Burton 2019; Wargo 2017a) and mental health (Cavazos-Rehg et al. 2017; Hendry 2020a; Seko and Lewis 2018) while having those conversations. Further, across these interests and commitments, users have told researchers that their tumblr experiences are communal, consciousness-raising, therapeutic, and educational (Chew 2018; Hendry 2020b; McCracken 2017; Tiidenberg 2014b, 2017). People often feel that on tumblr they can truly be themselves (Renninger 2014; Tiidenberg 2013). tumblr users seem to be quite self-aware about the platform’s role in their lives. Posts listing “things tumblr has taught me” are so common they can be considered a platform-specific meme (Figure i.1; see Chapter 5 for a discussion on tumblr pedagogies, and Chapters 6 and 7 on learning in specific groups and communities). Some of these lists are serious, others are funny, yet others deeply sincere. Many are everything at once.

      Figure i.1: Artist’s impression of a now-deactivated blog post from 2015 listing “Things tumblr has taught me,” with approximately 30,000 notes. Art provided by River Juno.

      Of course, tumblr is not a utopia. There are conflicts, arguments, toxic dog piling, and trolling between users (see Chapter 5 for a discussion on call-out cultures). The general consensus, however, seems to be that compared to most alternatives, tumblr has offered an inhabitable space for people and communities, especially those with minoritarian experiences, identifications, lifestyles, and values. As noted in the roundtable interview published in The Ringer, tumblr “felt friendlier than other famously weird internet zones like Reddit or 4chan. I still felt like I was on a cool detour, but I wasn’t in the Wild West, you know?” (Bereznak et al. 2017).

      Figure i.2: Artist’s impression of a collage of some posts under “#what tumblr has taught me.” Art provided by River Juno.

      tumblr is a silosocial platform

      Social media are diverse, but public imaginaries of their functions and implications are dominated by Facebook. Scholarship too, is heavily skewed toward Facebook (given its popularity worldwide), and also Twitter (given its high accessibility for researchers to extract data via the API). Generalist discussions and critiques of social media therefore often presume that social media sociality4 is profile-based and built on what is called the social graph and the ego network.5 In the case of Facebook, egos in the graph are represented by profiles – descriptions of the account owner’s social characteristics, often in the form of answers to questions, sometimes via predetermined options. This version of social media sociality is linked to individual connections and has been multiply critiqued in the past decade: as networked individualism (Wellman 2002), as people converging around someone’s profile or interacting in dyads instead of converging around interests (Baym 2010), as leading to context collapse resulting from the inability to modulate one’s self presentations to different audiences (Marwick and boyd 2011), as fostering a culture of connectivity instead one of connection (van Dijck 2013), or even as antisocial, because it discourages deliberation (Vaidhyanathan 2018).

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