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It’s complicated

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Facebook is no easy target. Just as telling the story of Facebook, as if there was one coherent and neat story to tell, is not really possible; neither is delineating the target in the first place. What Facebook is depends not just on whom you ask but when you ask. Ontologically, we might say that Facebook is not just variable in the technical sense as it is constantly evolving, changing and developing as a programmed entity with certain features and functionalities that only exist in a given instantiation, at a specific point in time. What matters to different people, stakeholders and other actors is highly variable too. In the same way that the internet is not one thing but ‘has always been multiple’ with different histories (Driscoll and Paloque-Berges, 2017: 48), there are not just multiple stories to tell about Facebook, but Facebook itself needs to be seen as multiple.

Drawing on a relational ontology reminiscent of science and technology studies (see Mol, 2002; Law, 2002), this book works from the assumption that there is not just one Facebook but many. This statement is true on many levels. As anthropologist Daniel Miller suggests, there are different Facebooks depending on where in the world you are and whom you ask. As a scholar who has specialized in doing fieldwork in Trinidad, Miller’s Facebook, if you will, differs from the Facebook you would find in Denmark or Norway. This does not mean that one version is more authentic or real than the other. Reporting from a large ethnographic study of how social media is used in five different geographical locales around the world, Miller et al. stress how there is no core to what Facebook is, because ‘Facebook only ever exists with respect to specific populations’ (2016: 15). A similar point can be made with regard to the many different versions of Facebook depending on its stakeholders: Facebook for Business, Facebook for Advertisers, Facebook for Developers and so forth. Facebook is not just a company, a partner or adversary. Facebook may be all, some or none of these things, or something else entirely, depending on how it is practised in specific situations. This is not to say that there isn’t a corporation, a technical stack and infrastructure, an organization and a board of directors behind this thing that we call Facebook. Indeed, there is only one board of directors that has the steering power and one company called Facebook, but how these things come together and matter in specific circumstances varies.

The idea, then, that Facebook needs to be understood as multiple is not about adding different perspectives to illuminate the meaning of a singular thing or to say that there are indefinite versions of Facebook that exist in parallel. As Annemarie Mol (2002) has argued in her anthropological study of how a medical diagnosis is practised, different practices do not just produce different perspectives on the disease, they enact different realities as well. This is not to say that everything is relative and that it all depends or that every reality made is equal in terms and effects. The trouble is not that the world is multiple and ambiguous but the fact that it seems singular because much work and politics have gone into making it appear this way. If we begin from the assumption that the world is already vague and indefinite, what should be of concern is explaining why many versions seem to hang together and overlap to begin with – not least to ‘make sure that they overlap in productive ways’ (Law, 2004: 55). For analytical reasons, Facebook may look like a singular object and be referred to as a social network site, a platform or infrastructure, respectively. There is nothing wrong in adopting these singular labels per se, it might even be the most pragmatic option to take. After all, how can you write sensibly about a topic while having to make amendments and caveats every time you use a certain label? Yet, pragmatism should not be an excuse for not explicating or operationalizing one’s terms of use. Throughout the book, I will try to be as concrete and transparent as possible with regard to the different labels used, bearing in mind that they will only ever serve as a shorthand and placeholder for the much more abstract concept lingering underneath – a concept called Facebook.

So, we have arrived at the notion of the concept, at last. At the beginning of this chapter, I suggested that Facebook is Facebook, hinting at the ways in which Facebook has become something of a concept. This is to say that, as time has passed, what we take Facebook to be has acquired a life of its own. It is no longer just a word, or a label for a technological platform or a social network site (if it ever was). As the example of Jace mentioned earlier attests to, we are living in a society where people are routinely socialized into acquiring a concept of Facebook, sometimes even without being an active user themselves. Facebook routinely figures in policy discussions, academic discourse, news reports and public controversies. It plays a habitual role in people’s everyday lives and exists more broadly as a global sociotechnical imaginary. As such, we might think of Facebook as a ‘basic concept’ (Koselleck, 2011) of sorts. For Koselleck, ‘a concept is basic if it plays a central role in our sociopolitical language’; something we cannot do without when accounting for ‘the most urgent issues of a given time’ (Berenskoetter, 2017: 157).

To situate Facebook as a basic concept, then, means thinking of its power as something that can guide thought and action beyond specialized academic domains as it becomes part of a wider public imaginary. At the same time, for media and communication studies, thinking of Facebook as a concept and not simply as an instance of social media, means grappling with the fact that this company has gained the same kind of currency in our common vocabularies as more overarching media forms such as broadcast or the internet.3 While I will not make any totalizing claims about the unprecedentedness of Facebook’s conceptual status in the longer history of media and communication, it is safe to say that Facebook has fostered both new concepts (e.g. ‘Liking’, News Feed, filter bubble) and helped to reconfigure existing ones (e.g. friendship, publicness, privacy).

The point here is not to provide a definition of Facebook; quite the opposite. In What is Philosophy? Deleuze and Guattari suggest that concepts have no identity, only a becoming. ‘There are no simple concepts’, they write. ‘Every concept has components and is defined by them’ (Deleuze and Guattari, 1994: 15). This means that concepts are neither fixed nor unambiguous. Instead, concepts are multiplicities that converge around the accumulation of their different conceptions and components.4 A concept includes all the conceptions people have about it, but those particular understandings are never completely stable or shared. So all our different ideas about Facebook come to form the concept of Facebook but these different ideas may not necessarily overlap.5 Because of their curious status as ‘similar enough’ but ‘not necessarily overlapping’, Mieke Bal proposes the notion of the ’travelling concept’ – the capacity of concepts to travel between disciplines, historical periods and dispersed communities (Bal, 2002: 24). Because concepts are dynamic, Bal suggests we might be better off studying the work that concepts do instead of chasing their particular meanings. This means that we have to pay attention to how the application of the concept of Facebook is ‘situated in a particular context and shapes (our understanding of) the latter’ (Berenskoetter, 2017: 160). Facebook can be understood as many things, only a fraction of which may be called social media. How Facebook is variously situated in journalism or electoral politics, for example, has performative effects on how we understand these domains today (see also Chapters 4 and 6). While Bal’s travels take her primarily between different scholarly disciplines, this book provides a different sort of travelling. It contains time travels (back and forth in time) as well as space travels (both geographical and topological). We will travel to specific domains, such as politics and news, and we will consider those who might not conventionally be able to travel (for political, socio-economic or bodily reasons). But before briefly outlining the book’s chapters, let us travel to a concrete geographical place with its specific conception of Facebook that may help to illuminate how Facebook is Facebook.

Facebook

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