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Horn highlights all the things you can expect to happen in an online community--thoughtful discussion, irreverent play, unabashed libido--and all the personalities you can expect to find--the clowns, the humorless, and the total jerks. In her personal style, Horn talks about what it is like to be a part of such a community both as a participant and as the person responsible for running it. She chats about how it looks and feels to judge whether a user should be banned or to introduce a celebrity like John F. Kennedy Jr. to the ranks. Horn also fills the book with excerpts from users' posts--many of them an excellent example of the bright banter that takes place when conferencing is going well.
Although Horn expounds on her own views on cybercommunity, she does so without pretense or pomposity. These are clearly personal views born of her experience and, even at her most forceful, Horn maintains a style that discourages readers from taking her discourse as The One Truth. Instead her writing shares the online world she's helped build and loves. Horn's personal tour of one small town in cyberspace has all the drama and humor of real humans interacting.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Cyberville readable, highly entertaining,
By A Customer
This review is from: Cyberville: Clicks, Culture, and the Creation of an Online Town (Hardcover)
Anyone questioning the relevance of Cyberville as a useful primer on internet culture should be pleased to learn that the book is being used as a core text in a course about cultures and communities in cyberspace at the University of Western Ontario. Don't let the use of Cyberville in an academic setting dissuade you, though. This book is far from your average textbook. Cyberville is an entertaining, highly readable account of author Stacy Horn's experiences with the creation of the online community ECHO. Horn uses a casual approach in detailing many of the issues relevant to online communities, including gender issues, cybersex, and online stalkers. The result is insightful and humourous. Cyberville is reccommended reading for anyone wanting to learn more about online communities. A word of warning, however -- Horn uses many postings from ECHO to illustrate her discussions. These egocentric ramblings from a bunch of self-loathing New Yorkers (especially the frequent examples from a conference entitled "I Hate Myself") are enough to inspire depression in even the cheeriest of individuals.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Very solid book on internet culture,
By A Customer
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Cyberville: Clicks, Culture, and the Creation of an Online Town (Hardcover)
There is a real dearth of good books on internet culture. Cyberville and My Tiny Life are really the only two worth reading. Horn has an amazing ability to step back far enough from the community she is part of in order to do a sociological analysis of it. It's incredibly readable, very human, but a still-relevant look at the way we form communities and relationships online.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Man is the measure of all things. (It's the people, Stupid!),
By jsb@mail.fcny.org (NYC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cyberville: Clicks, Culture, and the Creation of an Online Town (Hardcover)
In the technoculture of superficiality, 'community' has becomejust another buzz word, undistinguished in the mad rush to Make MoneyFast on the Internet. Cyberville manages to ignore the commercial mainstream and focus instead on the humans who turn out to be not all that different online than off. That this should be a surprise is remarkable but somehow, the other writers in the cybergenre were too busy looking at the wires to notice.
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