Posts Tagged ethnography

Week 7 Lifestream summary

This week was spent mainly analyzing and constructing my micro virtual  ethnography on YouTube’s Davidsfarm.  On Monday I flew from London to the States where I am working over the next two weeks.  While on the plane I didn’t have access to the internet (someday it will be possible), I spent most of the time outlining the structure of my virtual ethnography in Word.  Last week I had been tagging relevant Davidsfarm videos to my Delicious account and copying selected comments on the videos into Tumblr – both of which fed into my lifestream.  When I finally had internet access this week, I had my lifestream open in one tab of my browser and the WordPress pages where I was constructing my virtual ethnography in another.  I found the lifestream a very effective organizing tool. It enabled me to find the relevant videos for me to embed into my ethnography as well as pull out the comments from Tumblr. I was still collecting more information about Davidsfarm while I was constructing the ethnography so these were fed into my lifestream this week.

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The challenge for me was to take advantage of the affordances offered by the internet in the representation of an ethnography. A major criticism of qualitative analysis in the past is that the analysis process is not transparent so not subject to scrutiny.  With the introduction of software for qualitative analysis, such as ATLAS.ti, MAXqda and NVivo, the process is transparent but despite this software being around for 20+ years it is still not part of the toolkit of many social scientists (although this is changing) and it is certainly not something that can be easily picked up.  However, a virtual ethnography if constructed well, offers the possibility for anyone to explore the logic of the representation and have access to the same data the ethnographer works with.  And there is the possibility to interact with both the ethnographer and the elements of the ethnography – as well as contributing further elements (or data) – and interpretations.  Although there is a linear argument in the ethnography I constructed, I encouraged readers to dip into the ethnography, mirroring the experience of visitors to Davidsfarm who initially come across any one of the types of videos he produces by chance and who then elects (or not) to explore further Davidsfarm and become an active fan, commenting on videos and interacting with other fans and with Dave himself. 

After finishing my ethnography, I enjoyed very much exploring and commenting on fellow students’ ethnographies. I was amazed by their richness and the number of issues that they raised about virtual communities.  There seems to be a range of types of communities – from loose associations or what Tony calls ‘digitally mediated networks’ to communities where people are very open about personal issues and give and receive support – such as Sarah P’s quilting community.  Another issue that comes out clearly is power and control – examples are the communities that Sibylle and Bill explored.  This seems to be related to the motivations and personality of the founder members.  And for me in my ethnography in Davidsfarm, there was a real difficulty in discerning what was real, what was constructed and what was imagined. And I was puzzling about whether something constructed or imagined becomes real and what is ‘real’ anyway. I look forward to reading more of the ethnographies.

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My virtual ethnography

My virtual ethnography is finally ready.  I constructed it in WordPress but in separate pages.  Below is the start link but you can also access it from the top menu bar on my blog.  I haven’t figured out how to get these pages in my lifestream though.

Davidsfarm Ethnographic Sketchbook

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Week 6 Lifestream Summary

My lifestream this week reflects my work on the ethnographic project.  As a sociologist and research methodologist I spent time earlier this week reflecting on how I would approach this project after having finally decided to look at YouTube’s Davidsfarm.  I posted on Tuesday my research design  for the project following my own research design checklist which I developed with my co-author Judy Davidson.  The lifestream reflects my use of Delicious to book mark key videos on the site and the use of Tumblr to record my research journal and to store extracts of comments on the videos I bookmarked.  I wanted to get the big picture and an overview of Davidsfarm rather than focusing on a very microlevel on a selected video, for example. I managed to look at Davidsfarm at a very crucial point in its history which will be evident from the ethnography and I wanted to sketch out the territory for a possible full scale ethnography which would explore the elements of a virtual community, the construction of community and the impact of other constructions and the ‘real world’.  So the focus was to collect the range of information I needed and the lifestream reflects that this week.

I had a quick look at the suggested online tools we could use to present our ethnography and I played with OurStory without much success – partly because I wanted to focus on getting the material I needed rather than learn a new tool. I had already decided that I wanted to experiment with the presentation – and to use a wiki or WordPress to create a ‘non-linear’ approach to exploring the ethnography.

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Research Design

As a methodologist, I cannot ignore the issue of the research design of my micro virtual ethnography.

Given the time limit on the ethnography – basically a week – the study will be an exploratory one.

I will be using my own checklist for research design – see di Gregorio, S. and Davidson, J. (2008) Qualitative Research Design for Software Users, Open University Press: Maidenhead – http://mcgraw-hill.co.uk/html/0335225217.html

Research topic/ problem

Research Topic

The topic, which was given to us, is to do a virtual ethnography of a virtual community.  Motivation for this topic is partly practical (it is required for this course) but also intellectual and theoretical – to explore what is a virtual community.  The particular virtual community (if it is a virtual community)  I am going to explore is Davidsfarm. Why Davidsfarm?  It is fair to say it is a YouTube phenomenon – starting in April 2007 – with over 1000 video uploads by Dave – who has his fans – who have developed their own Davefarms fans’ website – and who has his ‘haters’ who have made serious and disturbing allegations about Dave’s past.  I ‘found’ Davesfarm a few months ago when I was exploring how internet users have not only been content producers but also analysts of their own and other’s content.  My focus then was on life histories – how users construct and analyse their life – and I found the video below that Dave constructed of his life history.

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It is Dave’s construction of his life and his many videos are Dave’s construction of Davesfarm.  The popularity of Davesfarm suggest for his followers or fans that it is what David Bell calls an ’ imagined community ‘ which they can join online.

Research questions

Research questions

The kinds of questions I am asking are ‘what’ questions.  What is Davesfarm? What is a virtual community? What would constitute as evidence of a virtual community?  These are very big questions and I cannot hope to answer them in a week.  The literature I am drawing from is the reading suggested on the course particularly Hines and Bell. I have also bought Hines’ book – C. Hines (2005) (Ed.) Virtual Methods: Issues in Social Research on the Internet, Berg: Oxford - which I intend to dip into. 

The approach is exploratory and from a social constructionist perspective.  It will be descriptive – hopefully giving a very general overview of Davesfarm and the elements that may constitute evidence of a virtual community.

Data Collection

Data Collection

The kind of data I will be collecting is secondary data – data created for other purposes. I will be looking at some of the videos on Davesfarm, some comments on some of the videos, links to other sites (such as the fan site) that is related to Davesfarm.  Due to time constraints, I will not be creating any primary data – such as interviewing Dave himself or some of his fans. The data itself is all qualitative although some descriptive statistics – such as number of videos uploaded, number of subscribers etc will be collected.

(Note: I am thinking about the term data collection – is this data collection or data observation?  Hmm.)

The research setting is online (I need to add this to my schema above).

The sampling strategy is retrospective – looking at the online history of Davesfarm.  The sampling strategy is theoretical – in the sense that I have already identified several types of videos on Davesfarm – ‘life on the farm’, ‘how-to videos’, and ‘Dave’s personal reflections’.  There may be other types. I intend to look at some of the comments on each type.

What I am able to do will be constrained by the time available for this task – one week. I have the necessary resources – computer and broadband link but my time on this task has to be balanced with the time I need to devote to my paid work.  In terms of ethics and access,  the materials I will be looking at are all public and easily accessible.  My proposal conforms to the four principles on ethics outlined by Sian

  • Ethical expectations of venue – both videos and comments are public so there is less obligation to protect individual privacy, confidentiality, right to informed consent, etc. They expect their comments to be read and commented upon.
  • the posters themselves do not constitute a vulnerable group
  • the initial expectations of both Dave in posting his videos and those who post comments are that they are a public not a private communication
  • the risk of the research to those involved in Dave’s farm is minimal as everything examined is in the public domain

Data handling and analysis

Data analysis

Given the time constraints, the analysis I will be able to do will be very general. I intend to use one of the timeline software packages to map out a rough timeline of Davesfarm.  I will use Tumblr for my research journal and reflexive memos as I explore Davesfarm.  Given time constraints data reduction will be very broad – based on the key types of videos I outlined above and key types of comments and contributors to Davesfarm.  I think I will use Delicious to bookmark these as I find them. I also have Evernote which I might use to store key information.  How I will present all this, I still need to think about. Of course, what I have outlined above is subject to change depending on what I find.

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Week 5 Lifestream Summary

I started off the week in Cardiff (Monday and Tuesday) and found that I had more time to work on the course when I am running all day workshops away (as opposed in London where I live).  That is because I can work on the train (ala Andy’s artefact) which I can’t do on the tube (ala my dystopic day artefact) and I can fill my empty evenings away with work/study.

Sian’s feedback was very helpful as it indicated that I was on the right track with the lifestream.  It is useful to reflect back on the week as it is easy to forget, for example, what I bookmarked in Delicious  and the range of things I explored.  This week I finally figured out Tumblr and have added it to my lifestream.  In previous posts I had mentioned that the work I did reading was not reflected in the lifestream.  I was inspired by Sian/Jen’s original description of the lifestream as an adaptation of the 17th century practice of ‘commonplacing’ – where individuals collated sayings, quotes, proverbs, images and thoughts in a single scrapbook.  I felt that the quotes bit was missing from my lifestream. I have started to use Tumblr as I read in order to extract key sentences that I want to reflect on in the reading.

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So as the focus of this week turned to thinking about our virtual ethnographies we will each be conducting my lifestream reflects some of the tools I checked out for reporting the ethnography, some links to ethical issues including an IBM video on what they are doing about cryptography.  I actually already had done some reading on internet ethics for a paper on Web 2.0 research which will be published in January.  My focus then was on the analysis of data online of which there is little published (as opposed to conducting research online) but I had read some of that literature. Unfortunately what I read was not digital – I had to go to the British Library to read the material – so I couldn’t add it to the Delicious tag that Sian set up.  But the issues I had focussed on were to do with privacy issues, ownership, copyright, security and the differing situation between the EU and the States.  Ethical issues were brought up in the Discussion Board and I added my thoughts about that before Sian and Jen blogged about their guidelines which was helpful.

The most difficult decision for me was to decide on the topic of my virtual ethnography. I blogged about my indecision.  I think I have decided now.  The criteria I used was ethical considerations about choosing a site that was public, that people were aware and happy that their posts were online, and a site where I did not belong.  For such a short study, I do not have the time to negotiate permissions and I was uncomfortable in doing so covertly – particularly as my presentation about the site would be so public.  So that ruled out Methodspace – http://www.methodspace.com/ which was my first choice. I think I will look at Davidsfarm – http://www.youtube.com/user/Davidsfarm#p/a a YouTube phenomenon – and I will blog about that separately.

On the Discussion Board they was some talk about looking at a site vs community and what was a virtual community anyway. I found the Hine and Bell readings helpful in that respect as well as the examples of virtual ethnography that have been recommended in the reading. 

By focusing on sites, locales and places, we may be missing out on other ways of understanding culture, based on connection, difference, heterogeneity and incoherence…the field site of ethnography could become a field flow, which is organized around tracing connections rather than about location in a singular bounded site. p. 61 Christine Hines

I like Hines’ notion of a ‘field flow’ rather than a ‘field site’ with a focus on connections.  If I think of studying my own household it would be very limited if the focus was just on the physical house itself and its inhabitants. It would be missing the connections to my mother and brother in the States, my sister in Italy, my step-son in Epping and my step-daughter in West London – all of whom impact on my household relations.

the texts that consitute the shared space of [a virtual] community…’enable participants to imagine themselves part of the community’ Bell, D. (2001) citing Baym (1998:62) p. 102

In relation to online communities, I found the Baym quote which Bell cites very illuminating.  The text of chat, comments etc. replies are ‘physical’ evidence of interaction, of a community which can be imagined.

I am not sure that Davidsfarm is a community but there is plenty of evidence for people to imagine it as one.  And that is what I think I shall explore.

 

 

 

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Undecided – which site, which community?

So far this week I have been trying to decide which virtual community I should look at.  On the discussion board I had suggested Methodspace http://www.methodspace.com/ as a possibility. 

I thought of looking at Methodspace which was set up about 6 months ago by Sage Publications for academic researchers. They invited all the academics they publish to join plus anyone interested in social science methods can join. I think they have over 1000 members.

However, I thought as I am a member of the group it could be problematic.

Then I thought about looking at a YouTube phenomenon I found a few months ago – Davidsfarm.

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He posted his first YouTube video two years ago and in June posted his 1000th. He has a worldwide following – with 55,872 subscribers.  The video I embedded above has had over 91,000 views. His most popular video – extreme jeep jump – has had over 1, 600,000 views. He has produced many ‘how to’ auto mechanics videos in addition to his videos on ‘life on the farm’.  But is Dave’s farm a virtual community?  Well, there is a lot of interaction going on – and some people who found him on the net have visited him on the farm. It seems kind of like a male bonding site – ordinary guys who enjoy messing with cars, trucks etc, drinking beer and having a few high jinks.  It is a completely public site so that minimizes the ethics issues we have discussed on the board.  I am curious to understand what about it makes it so attractive to others.

I don’t know. I have looked at a couple of Flickr group sites – again related to something I had looked at before – Flickr craft groups.  I found several scrapbooking sites in the past – and some people run courses through Flickr. I found a very interesting one and when I explored it I saw the teacher was a very talented teenager http://oldladyinateenager.blogspot.com/2009/02/life-story-class.html who has a blog http://oldladyinateenager.blogspot.com/ and an online shop http://www.etsy.com/shop.php?user_id=6152942 The trouble is that while the photos of the people who take her scrapbooking class are public, I think they have all copyrighted them.

Decisions, decisions.

 

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