by Nikki Bourke
on March 12, 2013
in Virtual Communities, Weekly Summaries
This week has been all about the ethnographic study and wow…an eye-opener of an experience! I’ve never done anything like this before. It brought the readings of the section to like by gently nudging questions over the definitions of community and subculture. What a wonderful opportunity to be able to live the ethnographer’s role from [...]
by Nikki Bourke
on March 12, 2013
in Virtual Communities, Week Eight
At the begining of my ethnographic adventure I set out to explore how far if at all the common interest may be stretched to encompass the imagining of community. I wasn’t sure how this theory would transfer onto the group I was looking at – YouTube Nirvana / Grunge Rock Group. I still feel uncertain [and a little [...]
by Nikki Bourke
on March 12, 2013
in Virtual Communities, Week Eight
Diversity is a wonderful creature. The ethnographic studies presented by all of our group are varied in both content and form. I think that it is amazing to see the difference in Gina’s You Tube experience contrasted with my own one. Likewise, Phil’s [experienced] use of Issuu felt like an inverted mirror image of my [...]
by Nikki Bourke
on March 6, 2013
in Virtual Communities, Week Seven, Weekly Summaries
Offline life has put pause to my online pursuits. Poorly children who require full attention leaving limited time to studies. This week my tumblog post has highlighted the role of history/historicism plays in shaping the present and the future. I thought that this was apt given the current activity. This week has felt like a [...]
by Nikki Bourke
on March 6, 2013
in Virtual Communities, Week Seven
For my micro-ethnography I decided to study a Nirvana/Grunge Rock You Tube community. Access to the ethnography is available here and EDC comments are listed below.
by Nikki Bourke
on March 1, 2013
in Virtual Communities, Week Seven
I love this quote [above]. Thought it fitting given the ethnographic course content that we are currently covering. Highlighting the value of the reflexive methodological approach. History repeats itself / coiling down into the future… Johnnydeeps (2008) History repeats itself A.O.S. available: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OIL-uFB7cIc [accessed 01.03.2013] Foucault, M. (2007) Space, power and knowledge. I: During, S. The [...]
by Nikki Bourke
on February 26, 2013
in Virtual Communities, Weekly Summaries
Direction change. This week has introduced all things ethnography related. It has been a heavy week in terms of teasing out ideas on what kind of community to look at, how to approach the task and how to represent the ethnographic findings. Tumblog Week Six postings reflect these tentative steps toward deciphering between community [...]
by Nikki Bourke
on February 25, 2013
in Virtual Communities, Week Six
Rheingold (1993) uses the petri dish as a metaphor for cyberspace. I love this analogy for the simple reason that it highlights the possibilities of cyberspace running parallel to offline reality. All too often there is the automatic expectation that all of our online experiences should be perfect simply because they are online, because they [...]
by Nikki Bourke
on February 23, 2013
in Virtual Communities, Week Six
I had settled on the idea of looking at a grunge community for my ethnographic study. I must admit that I have found it pretty difficult to pick an online community for this activity. After some pondering I think that one of the main reasons why this has been so difficult is simply down to [...]
by Nikki Bourke
on February 20, 2013
in Virtual Communities, Week Six
So in thinking about a culture I find my head a-spinning…so much choice. I was reminded of a blog post that I had read recently. It considered the ramifications and avenues of undertaking an ethnography of robots. What caught my eye about the post was the application of culture to this group… [...]
Recent Comments