New media, particularly hyperlocal blogs, have reinvigorated and reframed scholarly interest in locality. Online renderings of the offline world inevitably leave technological, ontological and representational lacunae; this article addresses those gaps between off- and online imaginings of the local. Using the New York Times “Local” blog as a case study, this article examines how the “Local” blog socially and spatially reproduces — and produces anew — two Brooklyn neighborhoods that are in the midst of conspicuous social and spatial transformation due to gentrification.
[This is a condensed version of my undergraduate thesis in Cultural Anthropology at University of Pennsylvania]