All:
At some point Friday past the discussion turned briefly to ethnography and information systems. I had recently seen the following citation and attach the appropriate paper. *Ethnography of Information Systems -- Course Syllabus* paper <PAPERS/STAR/LIS450EI.PDF> Ethnographic research is becoming increasingly important at key points in the design, testing, and evaluation of new information systems. In this course, we propose to survey the rapidly growing body of ethnographic analyses of information systems, to extend the basic principles of ethnographic research and to lead students in the development of projects modifying these principles for the emerging electronic environment. Susan Leigh Star, Department of Communication, University of California, San Diego Geoffrey C. Bowker, Department of Communication, University of California, San Diego *Biographical Sketches:* Susan Leigh Star is a Professor of Communication at the University of California at San Diego. She was previously a Professor of Library and Information Science, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. She is the author of /Regions of The Mind: Brain Research and the Quest for Scientific Certainty/ (Stanford, 1989), /Ecologies of Knowledge/ (SUNY, 1995), /The Cultures of Computing/ (Blackwell, 1995), and with Geoffrey Bowker, /Working Infrastructures: Classification and Practice/ (MIT Press, forthcoming). Correspondence can be sent to [hidden email] <mailto:[hidden email]>. Geoffrey C. Bowker is a Professor of Communication at the University of California at San Diego. He was previously a Professor in the Graduate School of Library and Information Science at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign. His book Science on the Run: Information Management and Industrial Science at Schlumberger, 1920-1940 is available from MIT Press. He has just completed with Leigh Star a book on the history and sociology of medical classifications (Working Infrastructures: Classification and Practice) and has recently co-edited a volume on Computer Support Cooperative Work (Social Science, Technical Systems and Cooperative Work: Beyond the Great Divide, LEA Press, 1997). Correspondence can be sent to [hidden email] <mailto:[hidden email]>. ================================= NB: This comes from a book and CD. Burton, Orville Vernon. "Computing in the Social Sciences and Humanities." Univ. of Ill Press, 2002. I first met Burton at what was either the first or second international conference on computing and the social sciences at the U of I in March 1993. Many of the papers in this collection were first presented at that conference, so many of the bibliographies are dated, as is the case of the attached paper. What was significant about that conference, though, is that it included what may have been the first public demonstration of a new concept/tool: a web browser called Mosaic. I recall being blown away sitting in an auditorium watching three monitors integrating the video of "Macbeth" on one, the text of the play as it was being performed on the second, and simultaneous concordance-type commentary on the third. One feed was coming from a U of I server, the second from a server from the Smithsonian and the third at the CERN facility. (Of course it never hurts to hold a conference at one of the super-computing sites in the country.) Somewhere in packing boxes I have a video tape of that presentation, and if I can ever find it, I will digitize it and post for the group. All the best, -Tom Johnson -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: LIS450EI.PDF Type: application/pdf Size: 27504 bytes Desc: not available Url : /pipermail/friam_redfish.com/attachments/20041226/3681ea0f/LIS450EI-0001.pdf |
Tom Johnson wrote:
> All: > > At some point Friday past the discussion turned briefly to ethnography > and information systems. I had recently seen the following citation > and attach the appropriate paper. > > *Ethnography of Information Systems -- Course Syllabus* paper > <PAPERS/STAR/LIS450EI.PDF> Looking at the attached syllabus reminded me of computer science coursework in systems analysis. The emphasis on human-machine interface and cybernetics doesn't seem to be ethnography, in either the traditional or expanded sense (from Mike Agar's encyclopedia article). I would have thought the coursework would include more emphasis on the various cultures (traditional ethnography) of the cyber domain as well as subjects such as the problem of how a systems analyst interprets user requirements through personal filters (expanded sense of ethnography). -- Ray Parks [hidden email] IDART Project Lead Voice:505-844-4024 IORTA Department Fax:505-844-9641 http://www.sandia.gov/idart Pager:800-690-5288 |
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