September 16, Panel on Digital Ethnography Special Issue

Editors and authors of this month's Digital Ethnography Special Issue of Qualitative Sociology discuss their research.

Join us as the editors and authors discuss their contributions to the September 2022 Qualitative Sociology Special Issue on Digital Ethnography. The special issue features an introduction by guest editors Jeffrey Lane & Jessa Lingel, an afterword by Mario Small, and seven empirical articles that use digital ethnographic methods to answer core sociological questions related to community, culture, urban life, violence, activism, professional identity, health, and sociality. This public event will be moderated by Melissa Aronczyk (Rutgers University); co-founder of Rutgers Digital Ethnography Working Group.

INTRODUCTION

Digital Ethnography for Sociology: Craft, Rigor, and Creativity, Jeffrey Lane & Jessa Lingel

ARTICLES

Diagnosis as Subculture: Subversions of Health and Medical Knowledges in the Orthorexia Recovery Community on Instagram, Amy A. Ross Arguedas

Do I Know You? Managing Offline Interaction in Acquainted Stranger Relationships, Tyler Baldor

Convivial Quarantines: Cultivating Co-presence at a Distance, Nicholas Bascuñan-Wiley, Michaela DeSoucey, & Gary Alan Fine

Exploring Social Media Contexts for Cultivating Connected Learning with Black Youth in Urban Communities: The Case of Dreamer Studio, Jabari M. Evans

Latency and Crisis: Mutual Aid Activism in the Covid-19 Pandemic, Elisabetta Ferrari

Code Ethnography and the Materiality of Power in Internet Governance, Fernanda R. Rosa

How Social Media Use Mitigates Urban Violence: Communication Visibility and Third-Party Intervention Processes in Digital Urban Contexts, Jeffrey Lane & Forrest Stuart

 

AFTERWORD

Ethnography Upgraded, Mario L. Small

Editors and authors of this month's Digital Ethnography Special Issue of Qualitative Sociology discuss their research.

Join us as the editors and authors discuss their contributions to the September 2022 Qualitative Sociology Special Issue on Digital Ethnography. The special issue features an introduction by guest editors Jeffrey Lane & Jessa Lingel, an afterword by Mario Small, and seven empirical articles that use digital ethnographic methods to answer core sociological questions related to community, culture, urban life, violence, activism, professional identity, health, and sociality. This public event will be moderated by Melissa Aronczyk (Rutgers University); co-founder of Rutgers Digital Ethnography Working Group.

INTRODUCTION

Digital Ethnography for Sociology: Craft, Rigor, and Creativity, Jeffrey Lane & Jessa Lingel

ARTICLES

Diagnosis as Subculture: Subversions of Health and Medical Knowledges in the Orthorexia Recovery Community on Instagram, Amy A. Ross Arguedas

Do I Know You? Managing Offline Interaction in Acquainted Stranger Relationships, Tyler Baldor

Convivial Quarantines: Cultivating Co-presence at a Distance, Nicholas Bascuñan-Wiley, Michaela DeSoucey, & Gary Alan Fine

Exploring Social Media Contexts for Cultivating Connected Learning with Black Youth in Urban Communities: The Case of Dreamer Studio, Jabari M. Evans

Latency and Crisis: Mutual Aid Activism in the Covid-19 Pandemic, Elisabetta Ferrari

Code Ethnography and the Materiality of Power in Internet Governance, Fernanda R. Rosa

How Social Media Use Mitigates Urban Violence: Communication Visibility and Third-Party Intervention Processes in Digital Urban Contexts, Jeffrey Lane & Forrest Stuart

 

AFTERWORD

Ethnography Upgraded, Mario L. Small

online