Zen and the Art of the Selfie Stick: Blogging the John Muir Trail Thru-Hiking Experience |
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Authors: | Sarah Hitchner John Schelhas J Peter Brosius Nathan P Nibbelink |
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Institution: | 1. Center for Integrative Conservation Research, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA;2. Southern Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Athens, GA, USA;3. Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA;4. School of Forestry and Natural Resources, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA |
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Abstract: | For cultures around the world, a journey, particularly one undertaken by foot through landscapes that are simultaneously natural and cultural, is both a metaphor for the discovery of the self and the divine and an embodied practice in the physical realm. Here we analyze twenty-six publicly available blogs of thru-hikers of the John Muir Trail in the Sierra Nevada mountains of California, U.S.A. Cognizant of the critiques of the intrusion of technology into wilderness areas, we examine how the communication medium of travel blogs becomes a vehicle for both self-reflection and for sharing spiritual experiences, and how the act of blogging merges virtual and corporeal communities formed among hikers. It is in the intersection of these social networks and mobile communication technologies that we find suggestions of changing relationships between a subculture of tech-savvy and highly connected hikers sometimes called “flashpackers” and the physical landscapes through which they travel. |
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Keywords: | Blogs mobile communications communication technologies backpacking flashpacking John Muir Trail |
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