There’s been some head-scratching going on about QuakerQuaker over the last few weeks. In the service of transparency I’ve posted my contributor guidelines on the “About QuakerQuaker page”. Here they are:
Post should be explicitly Quaker: Any thoughtful posts from any branch of Friends that wrestles in some way with what it means to be a Quaker is fair game. While we all have our own issues that connect deeply with our understanding of our faith, the Blogwatch only seems to work if it keeps focused on Quakerism, on how we our faith and lives interact. Back when this was just a links list on my personal site I would get complaints when I added something that seemed related to my understanding of Quakerism but that wasn’t specifically written from a Quaker standpoint (when we want to make this kind of link we should do so on our personal blogs where we can put it in better context).
Post should be timely: I’ve billed QuakerQuaker as “a guide to the Quaker conversation” and links should go to recently-written articles with strong voices. We’re not trying to create a comprehensive list of Quaker websites, so no linking to organizational homepages. While most links should go to blog posts, it’s fine to include good articles from Quaker publications. A link to something like a press release or new book announcement should only be made if it’s extraordinary. Remember that QuakerQuaker posts will only appear on the main site for a few days (if the initial setup goes well I can start work on some ideas to giave a more timeless element to the site).
Post should be Interesting: Don’t bookmark everything you find. If the post feels predictable or snoozy, just ignore it (even if the writer or topic is important). The Quaker bloggers all have their audiences and we don’t need to highlight every post of every blogger. Only make the link if the post speaks out to you in some way (it’s quite possible that one of the other contributors will pick up, finding something you didn’t and highlighting it in their description). That said, the posts you link to don’t have to be masterpieces; they can have grammatical and logical mistakes. What’s important is that there’s some idea in there that’s interesting. It might be a good discipline for each of us not to add our the posts from our own personal blogs but to let one of the other contributors do it for us.
That’s it. While there are some vague assumptions in all this about the role of tradition and community, discipline and individualism, there’s nothing about theology or who gets linked. This is a publication, with something of an editorial voice in that I’ve chosen who gets to add links and asked them to be subjective, but its very mellow and I’ve been happy to see contributors range far afield. Google tells us that this is one of 18.7 million “Quaker” websites and $10/month will get you your own so let’s not do too much navel-gazing about what’s linked or not linked. If you don’t find it interesting, there are plenty of non-subjective Quaker blogs lists out there. I do listen to feedback and am always twiddling with the site so feel free to send email to me at martinkelley.com/contact.
*sigh*
Yet another no-easy-answer sort of question for this online Quaker community. Corporate versus individual; spiritual discernment versus personal judgment; intention versus impact.
I predict that until we have webcammed MfWfB for Quaker bloggers, our online conversation and decisions are going to be second-guessed, head-scratched over, and experimented with. There will be gains and there will be complications and there will STILL be unresolved concerns…
Truth be told, I initially resisted the concept of QuakerQuaker (QQ) for fear of blogs or posts that might get overlooked due to the initial sole contributor’s personal interests or lack of time or energy. That resistance has lessened – but isn’t totally gone – as other Friends were invited to become contributors.
One of the unexpected pleasures I’ve gotten from QQ is seeing the topics and posts by Friends who aren’t part of liberal Quakerism or for that matter American. It’s helped me learn about Friends in a way that hasn’t been possible before: my “personal preference” probably would have kept me circling around in my own little sphere of blogs. Like a kid on a bike stuck in her own neighborhood, I needed a fun friend to say to me, “Hey, let’s go over HERE where I know some other cool things to do…”
Just for the record, I still don’t show a link to QQ or have a listing of recent contributions to QQ on The Good Raised Up. I guess that’s my way of saying it’s worth surfing the web, reviewing a bloggers’ list of blogs they read, and cross-linking within posts to one another’s blogs.
I’ll be curious to check back to see what other QQ bloggers and readers say. Thanks for being transparent in this way.
Blessings,
Liz, The Good Raised Up
Thanks for your thoughts, Martin. Being relatively new to this, I am still learning the blogging etiquette in general, and the Quaker etiquette in particular, regarding things like blogrolling. It’s helpful to hear your suggested guidelines.
I agree with Liz about the pleasure of connecting with Quakers from other branches. It seems to be one of the great gifts of this new medium.