Citations:vlogosphere

Noun: "(Internet) the realm or culture of vlogs; all vlogs taken as a whole"

 * 2006, The Independent Film & Video Monthly, Volume 29, page 32:
 * A bit older than most of vlogging's main practitioners — who tend to be in their mid- to late-20s — the self-proclaimed baby boomer cites Hodson as one of two artists whose work attracted her to the vlogosphere.
 * 2006, Anna Kuchment, "Technology: Want to be a Video Star?", Newsweek, 24 September 2006:
 * But even if you don't have movie-studio muscle to devote to your monologues, there are still ways to make a splash in the vlogosphere.
 * 2012, Liesbet van Zoonen, Farida Vis, & Sabina Mihelj, "Performing citizenship on YouTube: activism, satire and online debate around the anti-Islam video Fitna", in Self-Meditation: New Media, Citizenship and Civil Selves (ed. Lilie Chouliaraki), Routledge (2012), ISBN 9780415672122, page 36:
 * This implies a fundamental 'connectedness' of the YouTube performances that takes two forms: that of real connections to an already existing practice of religious and political participation, as is clear from the videos connected to the vlogosphere and from the many online manifestations of Islamic faith;
 * 2013, Sarah Banet-Weiser & Inna Arzumanova, "Creative Authorship: Self-Actualizing Individuals and the Self-Brand", in Media Authorship (eds. Cynthia Chris & David A. Gerstner), Routledge (2013), ISBN 9780415699426, page 162:
 * The terrain conquered by these cyberpioneers? The blogopshere (and its videostreaming complement, the vlogosphere).
 * 2013, The Participatory Cultures Handbook (eds. Aaron Delwiche & Jennifer Jacobs Henderson), Routledge (2013), ISBN 9780415882231, unnumbered page:
 * But in parallel with my direct experience of the blogosphere, vlogosphere, twitterverse, and other realms of digital discourse, I've continued to track new research and theory about what cyberculture might mean and the ways in which online communication media influence are shaped by social forces.