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Summary
The uncertain linguistic identity of Netspeak, in its various Internet manifestations, is presumably why so many usage dictionaries, guides, and rule books have appeared in recent years. People seem to have begun to sense that they are dealing with something new, as far as their linguistic intuitions are concerned. They are realizing that their established knowledge, which has enabled them to survive and succeed in spoken and written linguistic encounters hitherto, is no longer enough to guarantee survival and success on the Internet. Perhaps they have encountered the ‘painful and awkward lessons’ in social interaction which Patricia Wallace talked about (p. 16). Perhaps they have been misunderstood, misperceived, or attacked (flamed) because they have failed to notice the differences between this new medium of communication and the old. David Porter sums it up this way:
There are words, but they often seem to be words stripped of context, words desperately burdened by the lack of the other familiar markers of identity in this strange, ethereal realm. It is no wonder that these digitalized words, flung about among strangers and strained beyond the limits of what written language in other contexts is called upon to do, are given to frequent misreading, or that they erupt as often they do into antagonistic ‘flames’. In a medium of disembodied voices and decontextualized points of view, a medium, furthermore, beholden to the fetishization of speed, the experience of ambiguity and misreading is bound to be less an exception than the norm.
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- Language and the Internet , pp. 62 - 93Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001