kata ta biblia

a blog exploring Christian origins, biblical studies, social/cultural history, method, education and the journey through academia

Let's Rehash: Rethinking a Twitter Hashtag for Biblical Studies

Okay, given my previous post about female bibliobloggers, my conscience as a feminist, and some negative comments I’ve gotten about #bibstuds as a potential Twitter hashtag, maybe we should reconsider. One person thought it sounded “sexist,” another “misogynistic,” and another explained with less charged language, “[I]t had occurred to me when I saw your previous post that ‘studs’ might give the wrong impression and discourage women from participating.” Let’s rethink–and remember, the idea here is to find tags that aren’t generally used for something else. This will hopefully make for some interesting conversations on Twitter in our field. So, here are some ideas…

General Biblical Studies Hashtag Ideas

  • #biblicalstudies: to the point, but let’s face it, 16 characters is too long for a Twitter hashtag.
  • #bibstuds: short for “biblical studies” (not sexy men who wear bibs), memorable, but apparently sounds sexist and misogynistic.
  • #biblit: short for “biblical literature” (broadly defined, as in, the Society of Biblical Literature), nice and short, but “biblical literature” doesn’t seem as all-encompassing a term as “biblical studies.”

Hashtag Ideas for Biblical Studies Subfields (this may be a bit ambitious):

I’d like your feedback. Throw in your suggestions either for the general hashtag or for more specific ones. After I get some suggestions, maybe we’ll put up a poll. Then I’ll publish a list that we decide upon.

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  • http://ricchuiti.blogspot.com Tim Ricchuiti

    Isn’t anything biblical studies related simply going to be a link anyway? Which is to say, why not go with the full 16 characters?

  • http://patmccullough.com/2009/08/31/bibstuds-a-twitter-hashtag-for-biblical-studies/ Bibstuds: A Twitter Hashtag for Biblical Studies « kata ta biblia

    [...] See this post on rethinking the hashtag. Possibly related posts: (automatically generated)Review: Interpreting Biblical Literature by [...]

  • http://patmccullough.com/ Patrick George McCullough

    Hi Tim, I’m not sure I understand your first question. If it’s just easier to do #biblicalstudies, I’m game. I just want to get people started using hashtags so that those talking about biblical studies can be more interconnected.

  • http://ricchuiti.blogspot.com Tim Ricchuiti

    I meant, isn’t any biblical studies twitter post simply going to be a link to a longer post somewhere else. If so, the number of characters in the hashtag wouldn’t seem to be an issue…

  • http://patmccullough.com/ Patrick George McCullough

    Re: Tim. I don’t think it is. I have seen plenty of Tweets by those I follow on Twitter that are related to biblical studies, but don’t link to some other post. And even if they do, isn’t that more reason to have a shorter hashtag… since the link is taking up room as well?