
This week, my students began reading scholarship on print culture and community building, beginning with the classics in the form of Benedict Anderson’s Imagined Communities and Janice Radway’s Reading the Romance, and then moving on to some more current scholarship: Margaret Galvan’s “The Lesbian Norman Rockwell,” about the print communities of Alison Bechdel and Nami Kitsune Hatfield’s “TRANSforming Spaces,” about the communities of authors and readers webcomics about trans experience have facilitated. While I feel a bit ambivalent about how overused Anderson’s concept of the “imagined community” can be in scholarship (for him, it’s distinctly tied to nationalism, and lots of people who use the concept ignore that aspect), that concept and the Radway reading were good ways to get students starting to actually dig into the communities of readers for webcomics. One of my students wrote about the niche community of Lunar Baboon as seen through Twitter, and another student went searching through Amazon reviews for comments about Hark! A Vagrant. In the meantime, Galvan’s article got students thinking about the archival qualities of the web and the role they play in making marginalized audiences visible, while N. Hatfield’s article made them recognize the important role niche communities can play, particularly for those struggling with identity. Community, here, as elsewhere in the class seemed to be an uninterrogated given, and I want to spend this blog post discussing how I see communities differing from audiences.
Audience is a broad category that does not necessarily imply interaction, though audiences can certainly interact with digital media. All comments left behind are evidence of audience, regardless of their content. A community is a subset of an audience that, in my view, follows three principles: 1) members express self awareness of themselves as part of a community, 2) members interact with and address one another, not just the author or creator, and 3) membership is sustainable over time. While the first two principles are relatively easy to track in comments sections based on individual comments, the last has been a difficult element to prove, particularly with large comment sections like Hyperbole and a Half.

In broadening my focus from a single comic post, I am developing a new methodology for studying webcomics that requires me to sift through a lot more information in order to come to conclusions. I have made my task even more difficult by broadening in two different ways, one that captures serial publication and the other that considers the webcomic within its broader digital context, including comment sections and other page and site elements. My initial idea when trying to track sustainable membership in the community formed in the comments sections of the posts on depression was to start in early comment sections and track forward. While this was possible for the early years of Brosh’s work, when comments were limited to less than 100 per post, it became increasingly difficult to correlate users across comments as the number of comments increased. I also had no clue whether the people I was tracking in early comment sections would eventually appear in the comments for the posts on depression. Overwhelmed by the sheer amount of content I was trying to process and analyze, I needed to develop a different approach. Enter the idea of backwards planning, which comes from my teaching. Instead of starting at the beginning and going forward, I am now recording commenters from the depression posts and tracking them backward in other comment sections, paying particular attention to commenters who claim to have been reading for a long time or who identify themselves as part of Brosh’s reading community. This new approach allows me to distinguish Brosh’s audience from her community.












