Getting the Seats of Your Pants Dirty: Strategies for Ethnographic Research in Virtual Communities

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Paccagnella, Luciano. "Getting the Seats of Your Pants Dirty: Strategies for Ethnographic Research in Virtual Communities." Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication. Vol 3. 1997.

http://jcmc.indiana.edu/vol3/issue1/paccagnella.html

ABSTRACT
The study of social worlds built by people on computer networks challenges the classical dimensions of sociological research. CMC scholars are prompted to exploit the possibilities offered by new, powerful, and flexible analytic tools for inexpensively collecting, organizing, and exploring digital data. Such tools could be used within a Weberian perspective, to aid in systematic examination of logs and messages taken from the actual life of a virtual community. A proposal can then be made for a longitudinal strategy of research which systematically compares specific aspects of virtual communities over different periods of time and different socio-geographical contexts. The article summarizes a case study on an Italian computer conference, and concludes with a short outline of the new graphical CMC environments and their consequences for the rise of a multimedia cyber-anthropology.

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This page contains a single entry by K. Rosier published on November 1, 2009 3:46 PM.

Intentional Bodies: Virtual Environments and the Designers Who Shape Them was the previous entry in this blog.

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