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TopIntroduction
Based on the assumption that social networking is not a new phenomenon (Christakis & Fowler, 2009), this article depicts how locality is the main drive for creating social networking through connections (i.e., changing from word-of-mouth to online digital platforms). With regards to the components of new media, this article focuses on the intersection between communication networks and content (media) through personal connections and cable/interactive television (Flew, 2007). First, communication networks are referred to as connections through social networking as a communication strategy to create and enhance connections. The common point of the connections uses power actors to convince local people of a common interest and cause. Second, regarding content (media), this article elaborates on the complex and ubiquitous nature of social networking to identify its purpose, creation, work, and local effects. Analyzing the local market and market-making process can answer these questions and reveal how social networking is derived from contentious controversies created at the local level. It also analyzes how local institutions contribute to market-making processes by creating rhetorical devices.
Networks include a specific set of connections between people in the group (Christakis & Fowler, 2009). According to Gilles et al. (2009):
… a social network consists of a set of agents, which represent individuals or organizations, and a set of arcs, which connect the network agents. Social network theory suggests that these connections provide each agent with social capital and that the attributes of individuals are less important than their relationships and ties with other agents within the network.
James Fowler (Christakis & Fowler, 2009) analyzed the origins of people’s political beliefs by examining how humans come together to accomplish what they could not achieve on their own. It was proposed that altruism and goodness are essential to the growth and endurance of social networks. However, this article reveals how power creation and maintenance become the agent’s main motive to create and be part of a network. Through the creation of rhetorical devices, this article reviews the creation of these connections, as well as analyzes network functions. Therefore, this article reveals how rhetorical devices create sociotechnical controversies. The concept of controversy is identified as (Callon, Lascoumes, & Barthe, 2009):
Controversy focuses on plausible but fictional scenarios that provide acceptable interpretations of the observed facts … Controversy carries out an inventory of the situation that aims less at establishing the truth of the facts than at making the situation intelligible.
This article analyzes rhetorical devices in relation to an attempt to structure a reality in the process of sociotechnical networks (Lilley, Lightfoot, & Amaral, 2004) as the formalistic language with metaphors to persuade the audience (McCloskey, 1985; Mirowski, 1994; Swedberg, 2003) and change (Chakraborty, 2005). Based on a case analysis, this article is followed from an intensive fieldwork conducted in 2009 supported by numerous in-depth interviews and participant observations1.
TopConstruction Of Rhetorical Devices
This article focuses on rhetorical devices used by formal institutions at the local level. According to Callon et al. (2009), ordinary citizens have learned to mistrust information provided by the institutions. The isolation and exclusion of the producers reflect their suspicious behavior. Callon et al. (2009) argued that the suspicions of the inhabitants are encouraged by the ambiguous strategies of the institutions:
The only rational strategy that remains open to ordinary citizens is that of suspicion. To change the relation of force unfavorable to them, and to force professionals to take account of their fears and explore the overflows brought about by science and technology, laypersons must establish public debates so that the anxieties, fears and doubts that poison their private lives are expressed.