Identity and Leadership in Virtual Communities: Establishing Credibility and Influence

Identity and Leadership in Virtual Communities: Establishing Credibility and Influence

Indexed In: PsycINFO®, SCOPUS
Release Date: February, 2014|Copyright: © 2014 |Pages: 321
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-5150-0
ISBN13: 9781466651500|ISBN10: 1466651504|EISBN13: 9781466651517
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Description & Coverage
Description:

The presence and ubiquity of the internet continues to transform the way in which we identify ourselves and others both online and offline. The development of virtual communities permits users to create an online identity to interact with and influence one another in ways that vary greatly from face-to-face interaction.

Identity and Leadership in Virtual Communities: Establishing Credibility and Influence explores the notion of establishing an identity online, managing it like a brand, and using it with particular members of a community. Bringing together a range of voices exemplifying how participants in online communities influence one another, this book serves as an essential reference for academicians, researchers, students, and professionals, including bloggers, software designers, and entrepreneurs seeking to build and manage their engagement online.

Coverage:

The many academic areas covered in this publication include, but are not limited to:

  • Blogging and Influence
  • Leadership and Administration in Virtual Communities
  • Newsgroups
  • Performance Art
  • Real and Invented Identities
  • Social Media and Social Protest
  • Trolls and Flaming
  • Virtual Worlds
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Editor/Author Biographies
Dona J. Hickey, Professor of English at the University of Richmond, teaches courses in rhetoric and composition and in modern and contemporary American literature. A native of Wisconsin, she earned her M.A. and Ph.D. at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She is the author of Developing a Written Voice (1993) and Figures of Thought for College Writers (1999) and co-editor (with Donna Reiss) of Learning Literature in an Era of Change: Innovations in Teaching (2000). Dona’s articles have appeared in a variety of chapbooks, journals, and collections, both in print and online. She created the WAC program at the University of Richmond in 1992 and served as senior associate dean of the School of Arts and Sciences, 2003-2011. Outside of the academy, she enjoys spending time with her granddaughter, Olivia, and riding their spoiled rotten Arabian pony, Ryder, at Four Seasons Horse Center in Chester, VA.
Joe Essid directs the Writing Center at the University of Richmond, where he teaches courses in writing pedagogy, literature, and cyberculture. He is a Richmond native who did his undergraduate work at the University of Virginia, then earned a Master's and Ph.D. at Indiana University. His research interests include technology in the writing-intensive classroom, virtual worlds and their development, and the history of technology. His academic writing has appeared in Computers and Humanities, The Writing Lab Newsletter, and anthologies about technology and writing. He freelances as a science-fiction writer, with recent work in the anthology Catastrophia and forthcoming in Hagerty Magazine. He writes op-ed pieces about energy, localism, homesteading, transportation, and education for Style Weekly, Eighty One, and RVA. When not being an academic, he can be found keeping bees and learning the trade of an organic farmer.
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