Mr. Bolos and Mr. O'Connor: I am so, so sorry that I did not get this up on Saturday. My internet connection has been very spotty the past few days, and between SAT 2s and graduation stuff I haven't been around much to take advantage of it. I am really, really sorry about the delay.
Looking back on my blog posts for this quarter, I think that my best work was my post "Kony 2012 Sequel: Media and Foreign Policy." I liked this post because it touched on a current topic, Kony 2012, but in a more retrospective (and hopefully unique) way because I was looking at it a month later. I was really examining the Kony 2012 follow-up video released by Invisible Children
Like in many blog posts, I did at first fall into a narrative tone, saying things like "The video provides more details on the conflict - such as the fact that Kony's LRA currently only numbers about 250 fighters." But, I did not remain narrative the whole blog post, which was good.
As I got into the more analytic section of the post, I think I did some good thinking about the larger impact of things. I considered the fact that "with many campaigns setting up pre-written emails, sending a message to them [representatives] can take just a few clicks." And wondered how this new ability to get informed and take action quickly will effect the role of media on foreign policy.
I also liked how I did some extra research to look critically at the actual importance of the LRA. Using a fact presented in the video, "since 2008, the LRA has killed over 2400 people," I looked at one of the countries the video focused on, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and found that "in 2008, an estimated 45,000 people per month were dying in the DRC because of famine and disease." This was a new perspective and new idea that I brought to the conversation. I then turned to asking why it was that the LRA has gotten so much attention, but the other, more pressing problems in the DRC have not. I thought that perhaps this was because "people starving is much more expected, and much less glamorous than child soldiers." Yet, I had to recognize that sometimes famines do get attention from the media, and in one case "in the 1990s for some months the famine in Somalia got more attention than killing in Bosnia and Serbia." In the end, I'm still not quite sure how media decides what is and isn't important and how things become issues. So, I ended with that question.
Overall, I think that this blog post was my best this quarter. Although I really have no idea what the answer is to the questions I posed, I think that I was able to take a unique look at Kony 2012 through the lens of some of my Junior Theme research and some additional outside research.