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Antique Instagrams or Snapchats? Multimodal Composition of Early Twentieth Century British Postcards: Paper presented at “Aesthetes then and now: a bricolage of historical, artistic, and material-discursive meanings” Writing and Literacies Special Interest Group Roundtable at the American Educational Research Association Annual Meeting 8-12 April 2016, Washington DC.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Published
Publication date8/04/2016
<mark>Original language</mark>English
EventAmerican Educational Research Association Annual Meeting - Washington DC, United States
Duration: 8/04/201612/04/2016

Conference

ConferenceAmerican Educational Research Association Annual Meeting
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityWashington DC
Period8/04/1612/04/16

Abstract

At the beginning of the twentieth century, the picture postcard was the key social networking tool of the day. Through the innovative opportunity to combine with an image, written messages could be exchanged within a few hours, giving rise to a sense of near-synchronous multimodal communication. Untrammelled by the etiquette of letter writing, people traded privacy for a new informality and spontaneity.

This paper argues that the key endeavour of the Literacy Studies perspective, to deepen our understanding of writing and reading practices through fuller understandings of sociocultural context, can be achieved through the application of historical methods. With a dataset of 56 cards I investigate material and discursive dimensions of the texts against a background of historical evidence. A fuller version of this paper will appear as Gillen (in press).