This edited collection brings together a range of experiences from the field, largely in the context of CSCW and HCI. It focuses specifically on the experiences of people who have worked in difficult, tense, delicate and sometimes conflictual and dangerous settings. The tensions faced by researchers and, more importantly, how they manage to deal with them are often under-remarked. Unlike the bulk of published ethnographic work, the chapters in this book deal more explicitly with the various practical problems that researchers with varying degrees of experience face.
Our aim in this book is to give a voice to researchers who have sometimes contended with unexpected issues and who sometimes have had to face them on their own. We explore incidents which may entail emotional conflict, embarrassment and shame, feelings of isolation, arguments with other members of a team, political pressures, and ideological confusions, to name but a few. Senior figures in research laboratories and elsewhere may provide intellectual direction and support but may not always recognise the personal and problematic nature of qualitative enquiry undertaken by relatively inexperienced researchers. The chapters examine feelings of isolation, the difficulty of 'taking sides', the negotiation of personal, ethical, and political pressures in the field, and dealing with conflicting visions of what the research should be about.
The book is a resource for those embarking on the challenges of working in unfamiliar or difficult settings and moreover should act as a reminder to academics who might have forgotten the practical issues that researchers can face and how they deal with them.
| ISBN: | 9783031316449 |
| Publication date: | 10th October 2024 |
| Author: | Max Krüger, Debora de Castro Leal, David Randall, Peter Tolmie |
| Publisher: | Springer an imprint of Springer International Publishing |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Pagination: | 198 pages |
| Series: | Human-Computer Interaction Series |
| Genres: |
Digital and information technologies: social and ethical aspects Social and cultural anthropology Sociology Human–computer interaction |
This edited collection brings together a range of experiences from the field, largely in the context of CSCW and HCI. It focuses specifically on the experiences of people who have worked in difficult, tense, delicate and sometimes conflictual and dangerous settings. The tensions faced by researchers and, more importantly, how they manage to deal with them are often under-remarked. Unlike the bulk of published ethnographic work, the chapters in this book deal more explicitly with the various practical problems that researchers with varying degrees of experience face.
Our aim in this book is to give a voice to researchers who have sometimes contended with unexpected issues and who sometimes have had to face them on their own. We explore incidents which may entail emotional conflict, embarrassment and shame, feelings of isolation, arguments with other members of a team, political pressures, and ideological confusions, to name but a few. Senior figures in research laboratories and elsewhere may provide intellectual direction and support but may not always recognise the personal and problematic nature of qualitative enquiry undertaken by relatively inexperienced researchers. The chapters examine feelings of isolation, the difficulty of 'taking sides', the negotiation of personal, ethical, and political pressures in the field, and dealing with conflicting visions of what the research should be about.
The book is a resource for those embarking on the challenges of working in unfamiliar or difficult settings and moreover should act as a reminder to academics who might have forgotten the practical issues that researchers can face and how they deal with them.
Torn Many Ways features in the following genres: Digital and information technologies: social and ethical aspects, Social and cultural anthropology, Sociology, Human–computer interaction
Torn Many Ways is available in Paperback
Torn Many Ways was written by Max Krüger, Debora de Castro Leal, David Randall, Peter Tolmie and published by Springer an imprint of Springer International Publishing
Torn Many Ways has 198 pages
Yes it is part of Human-Computer Interaction Series series
£125.99