This past December, Instagram announced that it had eclipsed 300 million active users, which means that if it were a nation, it would be the fourth most populous in the world. Yet for many, Instagram still has a reputation for triviality—the superficial land of selfies, hot dog legs, and pictures of uneaten food.
And there’s nothing wrong with that. It’s still a fascinating platform that lets us offer an absurdly large audience portals to our own (highly curated) lives.
But what if Instagram could be something more?
Some of the most creative writers and photographers in the media industry have been asking the same question. And now, a few of them are providing answers. Some, for example, are experimenting with adding short profile essays to portraits, taking advantage of Instagram’s visual nature and sparse textual options to create a new style of literary journalism.
Journalists Neil Shea and Jeff Sharlet have been two of the most vocal proponents of experimentation on the platform—not to mention living proof that this kind of serious and literary Instagram journalism is not only possible, but necessary.
Both men are contributing editors for The Virginia Quarterly Review, and for their latest project, they will commission one writer per week (chosen by either editor on a rotating basis) to produce three to five Instagram stories for the respected literary journal. According to Shea, the tentative launch date for the project is July.
Though other publications use Instagram regularly, and sometimes even require staffers to be active on the platform, VQR’s project will be the first one designed exclusively for writers. The concept seems unusual at first—the Instagram logo, after all, is a stylized camera. Until now, words have been secondary and easy to ignore.
But Shea and Sharlet think the platform has underutilized potential for creative non-fiction, as well as a sizable audience that could be very valuable to traditional publishers and journalists.
“The audience I reach on Instagram I’m absolutely sure is not the same audience I reach at National Geographic,” Shea said.
He has recently been using the platform to post stories from his most recent assignment in Kurdistan—the kind that, in the past, might have only lived in his notebook. “I always come back from the field with full notebooks, and so many of those stories don’t make it into the final magazine,” he explained. “So I’ve always been looking for ways to use those stories in another way.”
Previously, Shea had tried using other platforms like blogs, Tumblr, and even Facebook to tell these otherwise untold stories. A National Geographic editor suggested that he try Instagram—but even then he was reluctant.
“What I knew about it at the time was cats, airplane wings, and selfies,” Shea said. “But then I started to look around a little, and I saw that a lot of my colleagues were using it in interesting ways—using it in ways outside their magazine photography.”
Sharlet, meanwhile, joined Instagram last August with similar apprehensions. As Sophie Kleeman writes in a profile of Sharlet for Mic, “He saw it as a dumping ground for the trivial and the superfluous… the things important only to an amateur photographer and his or her inner circle.”
But, like Shea, Sharlet quickly found a pack of creative journalists who were using the platform as a tool to tell stories about others, rather than themselves. The intimate profiles he now pens are powerful pieces of literary non-fiction, profound portraits of people who might otherwise be ignored.
It’s worth pointing out that there’s already a major player producing text-focused content on Instagram: Humans of New York. With over 3 million followers and a #1 New York Times bestseller, HONY is perhaps the most popular practitioner of Instagram journalism. Yet, when Sharlet first announced the VQR project on Twitter, he made it explicit that the style they practice is different from Humans of New York. He told his followers to think of the image as the first sentence of an essay.
“When you read Humans of New York’s stuff, it’s really just a quote,” Shea said. “And that’s not bad—I’m not making a qualitative judgement about it. There’s just room for more.”
The opportunity for novice writers and journalists—or writers of any expertise, for that matter—is huge. Sharlet and Shea are mainly looking for writers who have shown that they can create effective Instagram journalism—which, at the moment, is still a small number.
“The best thing to do is to try to out the creative limitation of the space and see if you enjoy it,” Shea said. “If you enjoy it, if it gives you a creative way to do non-fiction, then tag us and talk to us.”
For now, Shea believes they will post the work in an archive on VQR, but how exactly it will look and operate is still in the works. But no matter how the design turns out, his excitement for the project, as well as his appreciation for VQR’s willingness to experiment, was palpable.
“VQR was brave to do this kind of an experiment,” he said. “None of the literary mags I know would try this sort of thing.” With the potential to reach a 300 million strong audience, the bravery could end up paying off. “It’s like this giant disco ball of an audience and each little facet of the disco ball is showing you something different about the world. Interacting with that is pretty awesome.”