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INFO 272. Qualitative Research Methods. Constructing the Field Site (Multi-Sited and Virtual Ethnography). Outline. The Field Site Challenges to the Early Model Multi-Sited Ethnography Virtual Ethnography Examples. Selecting a ‘Field Site’.
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INFO 272. Qualitative Research Methods Constructing the Field Site (Multi-Sited and Virtual Ethnography)
Outline • The Field Site • Challenges to the Early Model • Multi-Sited Ethnography • Virtual Ethnography • Examples
Selecting a ‘Field Site’ • Where can you position yourself as participant-observer? (logistics) • What about the research topic is spatial?
Ethnography ala Malinowski 1922-1960s • Spatial Aspects of Field Work: • Field sites are discovered • One distinct, bounded site • the site = focus of ‘whole culture’ • total enumeration of the population
Challenges: ambiguous spatial terrain • cyberspace • borderlands and transnational communities • global institutions (the UN) • the mass media • non-places (airports) [Auge]
Challenges: urban settings • complex, heterogeneous, overlapping cultures [Hannerz] • “the challenge of foregrounding”
Challenges: media and technology • ‘double articulation’ [Silverstone] one can study the television (as a consumed object, it’s place in the home, it’s shape/size/style) and the television program • Internet can been studied as both culture and as cultural artifact [Hine]
Approaches: Multi-Sited Ethnography • studying the local as embedded in the global [Marcus and Fischer] • studying the global system itself [Marcus] • fieldsite need not be static and bounded • “follow the object” “follow the people” “follow the metaphor” to create coherence
Approaches: Virtual Ethnography • CMC vs. Online Ethnographers • Cyberspace – “profoundly anti-spatial…You cannot say where it is or describe its memorable shape and proportions…But you can find things in it without knowing where they are” [Mitchell 1996] • Questioning the nature of ‘dwelling’ and ‘participation’
Approaches: Online + Offline • Can you study someone online without studying them offline? (authenticity) • Theories of ‘cyberculture’ as detached and self-contained
Studying a Part of the Whole • Selecting an ‘entry point’ • How does the part relate to the whole? • What position do you take within the whole and how do you justify that position?
Couldry: ‘passing ethnographies’ • questions: • what is the role of media in the legitimation of wider power structures and inequalities? • how are media institutions and media people thought about? what are our beliefs about media power and how do they contribute to the legitimation of that power? • what position do you take within the whole and why? • moments where the process of legitimating media power was made explicit, visible • exceptional sites
Couldry: ‘passing ethnographies’ • questions: • what is the role of media in the legitimation of wider power structures and inequalities? • how are media institutions and media people thought about? what are our beliefs about media power and how do they contribute to the legitimation of that power? • method: • participant-observation • leisure sites (Granada Studios Tour) • protest sites • interviews • media clippings about the protest
Turkle: ‘Life on the screen’ • Questions: • how has the computer shaped our ways of thinking and feeling? • how does a nascent ‘culture of simulation’ affect our ideas about mind, body, self and machine? • how is the way we create and experience identity shifting? • What position do you take within the whole and why: • the culture of simulation as part of a larger cultural context • the eroding of boundaries between real and virtual
Turkle: ‘Life on the screen’ • Questions: • how has the computer shaped our ways of thinking and feeling? • how does a nascent ‘culture of simulation’ affect our ideas about mind, body, self and machine? • how is the way we create and experience identity shifting? • method: • ethnographic component • participation in a virtual world • clinical component • offline, in-person interviews with participants
Ethnography without borders • The field site is constructed (not discovered) • studying a ‘part’ of the whole • studying multiple sites • studying movement
In Conclusion • Before: Ask yourself – where is the social process carried out? where is it especially visible? where is it contested? • To Start: Seeking entry-points (not sites) • Follow people, things, themes to other sites (iterative approach) • To Stop: With meaning saturation re-situate yourself or quit
Thursday • No more fieldwork • Start preparing your fieldnotes to submit to me (due next Thursday) • Get some large notecards and make up 20 cards with notes (hone in on engagements with technology in public)