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Paperback Life Online: Researching Real Experience in Virtual Space Book

ISBN: 0761990313

ISBN13: 9780761990314

Life Online: Researching Real Experience in Virtual Space

(Book #6 in the Ethnographic Alternatives Series)

Alienating for some, yet most intimate and real for others, emerging communications technologies are creating a varied array of cyberspace experiences. Nowhere are the new and old more intertwined, as... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

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We receive fewer than 1 copy every 6 months.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

A great RE-read!!

I first read this book in 1999 and enjoyed the narrative style and the accounts of various Internet users. After re-reading this book, I realized that Annette Markham has completely captured my attention theoretically. The prose is quite easy to read, which makes this book easy to skim. But a slower and more focused read gives quite a different picture, which I missed in my first reading. There is quite a lot of theoretical work which occurs under the surface of the narrative account.I highly recommend this book for anyone wanting to study the Internet from an ethnographic perspective. It provides sound methodological advice and addresses some important issues for anyone conducting qualitative research. But it doesn't address these issues in a direct textbook fashion, which is why it requires close reading. I recommend that this book be read slowly and deliberately, in order to catch the underlying theory which informs this work.

A fun and provocative read...

Too many books on cyberspace are predictable. Once you know the theory (marxism, uses & gratification, etc.), you pretty much know the rest without reading it. Such is not the case with this refreshing book. Cyberspace is still a relatively new phenome non and it is a serious mistake to take our old theories and methods and force them into a mold that doesn't fit. That sort of work produces overdetermined results that are boring. Markham's book is NOT boring. It is a fun and thought-provoking account that will serve as a terrific starting place for serious inquiry about on-line experience. It would be useful and interesting for academics and nonacademics alike. If you are interested in thinking seriously about what happens to our "selves" when we go on-line, and you want a book that is well-written and engaging, you will like this book.I normally don't write these reviews but the reader from Cleveland is so out of line that I just had to offer my two cents worth. This book is an ethnography, so if you are open to such research you will enjoy this book..

Refreshing, insightful and beautifully-written.

If you never expected a book that bills itself as an "ethnography" would be an enjoyable read, let alone a page-turner, prepare yourself for a pleasant surprise. Markham's experiences online are lively, funny and weird -- sometimes all at once, and her insights into the meaning of self in the last years of the twentieth century are alone worth the price of the book. "Going Online" is a real testament that academic writing, in the right hands, can be positively invigorating.
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