The recording isn't publicly available, but I've summarised the main points below and included all my slides.
I've been immersed in the world of React developers since 2016. As a cultural anthropologist, the beliefs, norms, and social dynamics of Reactland have always been more intriguing to me than the useEffect hook or concurrent mode.
If you have never head of "cultural anthropology," don't worry. That's expected. It doesn’t often overlap with the world of web development and as a discipline it's not great at self-promotion.
It's essentially the study of human cultures and trying to understand how they work.
Or as one of my favourite anthropologists
From
Anthropology tries to answer many of the same questions philosophers concern themselves with;
Why do we have language? How should we organise our societies and institutions? How do we deal with birth, death, morality, and conflict?
Philosophers turn inwards to find these answers. They go into a small quiet room alone, think a lot, and read books by mostly old dead white men to find answers.
In contrast, Anthropology turns outwards - it looks for the answers in people. By living among them, learning from them, and taking part in their lives. A process known as
It isn't searching for one universal truth of all humanity, but rather particular truths for particular people, at particular points in time.
Looking at React through a cultural lens helps us understand it as more than simply "a JavaScript library for building user interfaces".
Technical definitions can be reductive - they draw a technological box around our concepts that hide the historical and cultural context.
What happens if we expand our understanding to include all the people who surround this React, and how they might affect and be affected by what's inside it?
What if we entertain the idea that humans and the culture of React are an essential part of what defines React? What if we consider it a cultural ecosystem we're active participants in, rather than simply a package we npm install
Cultural anthropology is perfectly placed to help us find answers to these questions.
We should establish who we’re talking about when we say “the react community” - where do we think the boundaries of the React community are, and who do we think is part of it?
I drew a very incomplete and fuzzy map of the React world here. It’s definitely not comprehensive or to scale.
I drew this to point out two key things. First, being a React person isn’t a mutually exclusive identity - you can be other things too.
We have many overlapping and neighbouring communities we all belong to. You might also be part of the Data Viz world, or hang out within a sub niche like React Native.
Second, our community has very fluid boundaries. People flow in and out quite easily – anyone who finds it can join. To become a member you didn’t need to fill out a form and send it to a committee, or go through an initiation ceremony.
You also have the freedom to leave whenever you like.
These fuzzy boundaries sometimes make us a little bit anxious - it's hard to know who's part of the group, and weakens our sense of being a cohesive whole.
Another way to try and understand the React community is to look at some rough numbers.
These are interesting indicators, but they're not necessarily helpful if we're primarily interested in how React works as a cultural system.
Rather than talking about stats and numbers, it’s much more meaningful for us to talk about React an an
This was a concept developed by a political scientist called
Anderson was writing about how nations imagine themselves as collective wholes, but his theory maps very well to how online communities like React work.
An imagined community has nothing to do with it being imaginary in the sense of being fake, but simply that it’s something we have to mentally construct across thousands of individual minds. It gets built through shared images and rituals.
Anderson specifically uses the idea of a national daily newspaper.
The act of sitting down and reading the daily news, and imagining a whole nation of other people, similar like you, sitting and reading those exact same words at roughly the same time, creates a sense of collective belonging.
It’s a daily ritual that reaffirms your membership, and sense of unity with a greater whole.