Autoethnography: proposing a new method for Information Systems research
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Autoethnography: PROPOSING A NEW METHOD FOR IS RESEARCH
Niamh (‘Neve’) O Riordan, National University of Ireland Galway, Ireland
ie.linkedin.com/in/niamhoriordan/
European Conference on Information Systems, TEL AVIV 2014
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AGENDA
1. Motivation2. About… ethnographies3. Doing autoethnography4. Writing autoethnography5. Evaluating autoethnography6. Summary and conclusions
European Conference on Information Systems TEL AVIV 2014
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1. Motivation• The social and the technical are inextricably entangled in everyday, digitally mediated practice
– How do emerging technologies facilitate the production of revised and novel forms of “digital being”?
– IS research must make sense of the relationship between technology and what it means to be human…
• New research on the emergence of new forms of embodied (digital) identity is emerging– IS researchers don’t have a a significant arsenal of methods to draw on– IS papers are limited in terms of genre variety– The challenge: to evoke the discursive, embodied, material and immersive aspects of digital
identity• Autoethnographic methods can help:
– To research digitally mediated experiences in everyday, digitally mediated practice – To provide new opportunities to communicate the findings of this research, and – To facilitate the development of new theories of digital being
• This paper presents a practical introduction to autoethnography for IS researchers and proposes a set of criteria that IS researchers can use to evaluate future autoethnographic research in IS
European Conference on Information Systems TEL AVIV 2014
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2. About… ethnography
• Ethnography relies on first-hand observations made by a researcher immersed over an extended period of time in a culture in which s/he is unfamiliar (Atkinson and Hammersley, 1994).
• It is one of the most in-depth research methods available and is well suited to obtaining a deep understanding of people and the broader context within which they are embedded
• The particular strength of ethnographic methods for IS research is that they provide rich insights into the human, social and organisational aspects of IS phenomena
European Conference on Information Systems TEL AVIV 2014
Factoid: Pare et al.(2008) found that only 2.6% of the IS papers they sampled use ethnography
2. About… ethnography in IS
Factoid: According to Schultze (2000), this is partly because there’s a lack of clarity about evaluating ethnographic research in IS
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2. About… autoethnography
• Autoethnography is “an autobiographical genre of writing and research that displays multiple layers of consciousness, connecting the personal to the cultural”
• It is a form of reflexive ethnography, designed to take into account the researcher’s self in interaction with the object of study (Davies, 2008).
• In autoethnography, – The author’s gaze turns and bends back upon themselves – The self becomes an ethnographic exemplar – The self is viewed as “a multiple, constructed self that is always becoming and never quite
fixed” • Ethnographic productions of such a self and the ‘cultural other’ are seen to be
historically and culturally contingent
• It is used to describe and systematically analyse (graphy) personal experience (auto) in order to understand cultural experience (ethno)
• Not without its difficulties: “it is difficult to write about the self and to be an escape artist from the self at the same time”… but is useful because it challenges accepted views about (silent) authorship European Conference on Information Systems TEL AVIV 2014
“The self both is and is not a fiction; is unified and transcendent and fragmented and always in process of being constituted, can be spoken of
in realist ways and cannot; its voice can be claimed as authentic and there is no guarantee
of authenticity” (Gannon, 2006).
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3. Doing autoethnography
• Approach: participant observation and field texts
• Analysis: – An informed analysis of personal experience is used to illustrate facets of cultural
experience – Reflections on the author’s own behaviours and thoughts used to reveal phenomena that
might otherwise remain concealed• “introspective self-observation” • “interactive introspection”
• IS specific issues:– No texts available on online autoethnography: being, there, with…– How to distinguish observation, participant observation and self observation?
• Self observation of an avatar?
– Ethical issues to do with information disclosure – Methodological issues to do with multimedia
European Conference on Information Systems TEL AVIV 2014
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• Writing autoethnography is at least as important as doing autoethnography
There are few texts available on how to do it and there is a lot of
controversy about autoethnographic writing
• Autoethnographers seek to develop and deploy a variety of writing techniques in order to:– Make personal and cultural experience meaningful – Reach a wider audience than traditional research – Increase the evocativeness, verisimilitude and appeal of research texts
• IS specific opportunities:– Novel evocations and representations of digitally mediated research settings– Production of performative texts (e.g. screenplay)
4. Writing autoethnography
European Conference on Information Systems TEL AVIV 2014
“Ethnography is not an innocent practice. Our research practices are performative, pedagogical, and political. Through our
writing and our talk, we enact the worlds we study” (Denzin, 2006)
Writing Genres:
TextualStrategies:
European Conference on Information Systems TEL AVIV 2014
4. Writing autoethnography: writing genres and textual strategies
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5. Evaluating autoethnography
European Conference on Information Systems TEL AVIV 2014
Criterion Description
Sincerity Sincerity is concerned with the degree to which a study is marked by honesty and transparency. The concept encompasses the ideas of confirmability and dependability but is more suitable for autoethnographic research than the concepts of authenticity and verisimilitude because it concerns the motives and intentions of the researcher specifically
Resonance Autoethnographers must ensure that the research meaningfully reverberates with and affects an audience, even where readers have no direct experience of the topic discussed
Contribution In autoethnography, the value of narrative truth is based on what a story of experience does—how it is used, understood, and responded to rather than the credibility of the research per se
Rich insight Ethnographic research is judged according to the richness of the insights it delivers into the subject matter. A subjective process of self-consciousness inquiry) plays an essential role in delivering these insights in autoethnography.
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6. Summary and conclusion• This paper proposes autoethnography as a new method for IS
research– The method is well suited to IS topics
• Performativity, socio-materiality, embodied identity…– IS topics can also shed light on the method itself
• Online autoethnography
• It distinguishes between doing and writing autoethnography and highlights some of the main IS-specific issues associated with each of these types of research activity
• It concludes by proposing four criteria that can be used to evaluate future autoethnographic studies in IS
European Conference on Information Systems TEL AVIV 2014
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Full paper available at http://aisel.aisnet.org/ecis2014/proceedings/track03/6/ or from
Niamh O Riordan, National University of Ireland Galway, Ireland
[email protected] ie.linkedin.com/in/niamhoriordan/
Thank You
European Conference on Information Systems TEL AVIV 2014