Reading together

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Time photoOur course invites you to work with data collection and analysis, readings, and discussion around the field of literacy studies

Author: Carmel

Who's afraid of the big, bad wolf?
@ Me

@ Me

The phrase “literary event” has a connotation that doesn’t fully encompass its meaning. It implies that there is a specific or special occasion occuring that directly involves literacy in a traditional sense of the word. However, it is meant to encompass much simpler occurrences, in a more everyday setting.

image

 

The image I chose is of a girl at school, holding up a sign that says “@ me.”  This is a popular meme on Twitter, used in response to “subtweeting.” (Tweets directed toward a person or follower without explicitly naming or tagging them; usually as a complaint or insult). The girl in the picture has looks nonchalant and uncaring, while the saying “@ me” itself implies that you do care what people are saying and dares others to speak unkindness directly to you. Even if they did “@” you though, it would be over social media and cannot function as a face to face interaction. This is a very commonly used means of controversy in my generation.

This image is culturally significant because ten years ago, it would have had no meaning. Before Twitter, the @ sign got almost no use.  Now almost everyone I know has their own individual “@,” myself included. It functions as a second name or identity exclusively for the Internet or social media. For example, mine is @carmel_butnotsosweet. When I talk to my friends online, this becomes my identity. My friend Jennifer’s online name is so popular and known, that for months after I met her (and was immediately added online by her) I and several others didn’t know her actual name was Jennifer, because we almost exclusively had spoken to her as her online persona, “Chappy.”

 

 

 

Blog About It

Blog About It

My name is Carmel Pedretti, and I am a local to Chico.  I am 21 years old, and a junior at Chico State.  I spent my senior year of high school at Butte Community College, and the first half of my freshman year at San Francisco State.  In Spring of 2013, I transferred back to Butte and finished my general education, at which point I transferred to Chico.  I am currently pursuing a double major in English Studies and Business Management.  I would like to become involved in a career in publishing and/ or editing.  I would also like to go to grad school and get my masters in English Studies.  I’ve worked at Tres Hombres Bar and Grill since I was 14 years old, and thoroughly enjoy working there still.  My father, Tod Pedretti, is the general manager there.  My mother, Tracy Berman, is a professor at Chico state in the Nutrition department.

I love to read and write, and was active in my High School’s literary magazine.  I’ve written in a journal once a day, every day for the last 4 years.  I mostly write short stories and poetry, and some prose.  I will read anything from the newspaper, to online blogs, to classic literature: basically anything I can get my hands on.  Anything I read, I will read front to back, whether I’m enjoying the story or not.  I also love making lists of unique words I come across. I visit the blog other-wordly.tumblr.com often to find really good unique words.  I agreed very strongly with Szwed’s article, that literacy is not something you can define in black and white, because it depends on where your from, and what your community defines it as.