paul's research


And here’s the second presentation that day.

Religious Podcasting
View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own. (tags: web2.0 religion)

I’ve just slideshare.com, which can upload and share PowerPoint slides like YouTube and flickr. Here is a show of my presentation at the first panel at AoIR 9.0 a couple of days ago.

Rhetoric And Realities
View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own. (tags: web2.0 religion)

I gave my two presentations to the conference yesterday. The first was on negotiations of authority in the emerging church blogosphere in a panel of Web 2.0 Rhetoric and Realities. The second was on religious podcasting in a panel on new conversations in religion online. Heidi Campbell visited my presentation in the first one, and I noticed that while I was showing the data she had quite an excited look on her face. Then before my second presentation she gave a paper on authority and identity within Christian and Jewish blogs, and I saw that we had much the same conclusions on our separate research.

So we talked this morning and decided to pull our stuff together to make a joint paper for a journal. Great, I’ve done what I’ve come here to do.

I also found out about a research group at the University of Oslo called Intermedia, which is an interdisciplinary team on researching uses of new media in creating communities and democracies. One of the religion online panel was eager for me to check it out some more so I met up with the director of Intermedia at the conference and will look into what may be on offer for an Aussie with a PhD in online religion. Worth a look at least.

Copenhagen 2008 005

Now Copenhagen is a beautiful place, and the people   are generally nice. Helpful, yes. Polite, yes. Friendly, oh my God no. Melbourne, and to an even greater extent regional Victoria, is full of people who may be crass, lack gentility, but by God they’re friendly. If someone is standing alone on a street corner somewhere in Vic holding a map, within minutes there will be three four locals offering to help. Up here among the Copenhagen 2008 010Danes, you need to be yelling out “Excuse me please” in a tone befitting “Help I’m being eaten alive!” in order to get any sort of reaction. You will get the information you need, you may even get a smile (if you are overly grateful). But you will leave the conversation with some of your life energy drained.

A new friend made at the conference who is living in Copenhagen but is originally from Makedonia, heard my confession that I don’t care much for the Danes’ lack of openness, and responded by saying she was friendly with her colleagues, but it took her two whole years to actually make a friend in the city.Copenhagen 2008 009

Yesterday I sat all day in a doctoral colloquium, where seven of us PhD students presented our wares to two mentors, who were critical and kind to all of us. I think I did okay. I was told that my writing style can be dogmatic at times, ignoring nuances and questions in some of the assertions I make. in my oral presentation I had made it clear to them I wasn’t as closed in my thinking that my writing had led them to believe. I thought that was an extremely important criticism, one that I’ve often wondered about. So when I get a chance I’ll do a re-read of some paragraphs and see how I can soften the tone a little. But I had some great conversations with students, made completely stupid Aussie jokes and made new friends. Ended up at the pub until late. That was cool - feeling a little more at home now.

Copenhagen 2008 013 Before then my old mate Allan met me for dinner, and took me around Copenhagen, bought me a beer in a really kitsch bar. Allan saved Denmark from the wrath of ill prejudice. Thanks mate, so good to see you.

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