Virtual EthnographySAGE, 2000 M04 4 - 192 pages Cutting though the exaggerated and fanciful beliefs about the new possibilities of `net life′, Hine produces a distinctive understanding of the significance of the Internet and addresses such questions as: what challenges do the new technologies of communication pose for research methods? Does the Internet force us to rethink traditional categories of `culture′ and `society′? In this compelling and thoughtful book, Hine shows that the Internet is both a site for cultural formations and a cultural artefact which is shaped by people′s understandings and expectations. The Internet requires a new form of ethnography. The author considers the shape of this new ethnography and guides readers through its application in multiple settings. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 65
Page vii
... Communications Technologies has helped me to formulate and clarify my ideas, and I am grateful to the Communications and Media Studies and MA Communications and Technology students who have taken that course over the years and helped to ...
... Communications Technologies has helped me to formulate and clarify my ideas, and I am grateful to the Communications and Media Studies and MA Communications and Technology students who have taken that course over the years and helped to ...
Page 2
... communicating. Communication can be synchronous or asynchronous, it can consist of private messages between known individuals or discussion among large numbers in relatively public forums, and it can be textual or audio or visual ...
... communicating. Communication can be synchronous or asynchronous, it can consist of private messages between known individuals or discussion among large numbers in relatively public forums, and it can be textual or audio or visual ...
Page 3
... communications technologies for the book publishing and retailing industries, as a part of his examination of the role of electronic communications in redefining urban space. Mitchell describes possible future scenarios for transferring ...
... communications technologies for the book publishing and retailing industries, as a part of his examination of the role of electronic communications in redefining urban space. Mitchell describes possible future scenarios for transferring ...
Page 5
... communication; and a questioning of dualisms such as the real and the virtual, truth and fiction, the authentic and ... communications technologies are a logical upshot of Introduction 5.
... communication; and a questioning of dualisms such as the real and the virtual, truth and fiction, the authentic and ... communications technologies are a logical upshot of Introduction 5.
Page 6
... communication technologies are the agents of such radical changes in social organization that they deserve a period all to themselves: the information society. Thrift (1996b) describes a 'virus of new era thinking' which tends to hail ...
... communication technologies are the agents of such radical changes in social organization that they deserve a period all to themselves: the information society. Thrift (1996b) describes a 'virus of new era thinking' which tends to hail ...
Contents
1 | |
14 | |
3 The Virtual Objects of Ethnography | 41 |
4 The Making of a Virtual Ethnography | 67 |
5 Time Space and Technology | 83 |
6 Authenticity and Identity in Internet Contexts | 118 |
7 Reflection | 147 |
Glossary of Internet Terms | 157 |
References | 163 |
Index | 175 |
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Common terms and phrases
accounts activities analysis appropriate audience authenticity performance authors boundaries bounded social campaign challenge Chapter claims communication connections construction context coverage cultural artefact cyberspace defined definition dejanews designers developers discourse discourse analysis electronic ethno ethnographer’s ethnographic ethnographic approach experience explore face-to-face field file final find finding first focus focusing identity play Internet as culture Internet service providers interpretive flexibility judge’s Louise Woodward Louise’s lurkers mass media meaningful messages newsgroup postings object official offline online settings organization orientation participants particular poster postmodern potential practices problems produced questions readers reflection reflexivity relationships relevant search engine seen sense significance situationally social relations social spaces space of flows specific statements strategies suggests television temporal collage topic trial understanding updated Usenet users virtual ethnography visitors web designers web developers web pages Woolgar