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Virtual Methods
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Table of Contents

1. Virtual methods and the sociology of cyber-social-scientific knowledge Christine Hine, University of Surrey Part 1 Research Relationships and Online Relationships Introduction Christine Hine, University of Surrey 2. Internet behaviour and the design of virtual methods Adam Joinson, The Open University, UK 3. Online interviewing and the research relationship Jolle Kivits, London School of Economics and Political Science 4. From online to offline and back: moving from online to offline relationships with research informants Shani Orgad, London School of Economics and Political Svience 5. Researching the online sex work community Teela Sanders, University of Leeds 6. Ethnographic presence in a nebulous setting Jason Rutter, University of Manchester Gregory W. H. Smith, University of Salford 7. Centring the links: understanding cybernetic patterns of co-production, circulation and consumption Maximilian C. Forte, University College of Cape Breton Part II Research Sites and Strategies Introduction Christine Hine, University of Surrey 8. The role of maps in virtual research methods Martin Dodge, University College London 9. New connections, familiar settings: issues in the ethnographic study of new media use at home Hugh Mackay, The Open University, UK 10. Doing anthropology in cyberspace: fieldwork boundaries and social environments Mario J.L. Guimares Jr., Brunel University 11. Web sphere analysis: an approach to studying online action Steven M. Schneider, SUNY Institute of Technology Kirsten A. Foot, University of Washington, USA 12. The network approach to Web hyperlink research and its utility for science communication Han Woo Park, YeungNam University, S. Korea Mike Thelwall, University of Wolverhampton 13. Sociable hyperlinks: an ethnographic approach to connectivity Anne Beaulieu, Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Science, Amsterdam 14. Epilogue: methodological concerns and innovations in Internet research Nicholas Jankowski, University of Nijmegen Martine van Selm, University of Nijmegen

Promotional Information

Also available in hardback, 9781845200848 GBP50.00 (April, 2005)

About the Author

Christine Hine is Lecturer, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey. She is the author of Virtual Ethnography (2000, Sage).

Reviews

'Through the discussion of case studies using the internet and Hine's own insightful coments, Virtual Methods significantly adds to the accumulation of professional knowledge.' Mike O'Donnell, Times Higher Education Supplement 'A welcome resource for scholars studying online communities from the perspectives of sociology, communication, media studies, and other fields.' Susan Keith, Resource Centre for Cyberculture Studies 'An important contribution to the field of online (virtual) research.' Nils Zurawski, Resource Centre for Cyberculture Studies 'A new and important anthology on Internet research has just been released. This book, Virtual methods: Issues in social research on the Internet, can rightfully be considered a successor to the now classic Doing Internet research, compiled by Steve Jones some six years ago...[T]his material lends itself to engaged classroom discussion and provides useful material for students to design their own research projects...And, for the methodologists among us, this book represents an important contribution in determining the particular nature of Internet research.' Nicholas W. Jankowski, Radboud University Nijmegen

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