
Virtual Environments and Cultures
A Collection of Social Anthropological Research in Virtual Cultures and Landscapes
Undine Frömming(Editor)
Peter Lang Verlag
Published on 27. June 2013
Book
Hardback
265 pages
978-3-631-63000-6 (ISBN)
Description
Virtual reality is no longer an issue that we can avoid or ignore. It is an essential part of our experience, influencing cultures and individuals all over the world. This book presents a collection of ethnographic research in the virtual world of Second Life, and can be seen as an attempt to discover the challenges and limits of social anthropological research with an avatar in virtual cultures and environments. The contributions in this book demonstrate that the development of «digital codes» has meanwhile gone so far that anthropologists have started to conduct fieldwork inside digital user-generated worlds. This volume investigates the challenges facing a reality that is strongly and maybe irrevocably entangled with virtual reality. This development holds disadvantages and dangers but advantages as well - such as freedom of expressions for minority groups, social online activists, religious communities or artists. All research is based on qualitative methods, with group and single interview situations and participant observation over a period of between three and ten months.
More details
Edition
New edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Berlin
Germany
Edition type
New edition
Dimensions
Height: 21 cm
Width: 14.8 cm
Weight
580 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-631-63000-6 (9783631630006)
DOI
10.3726/978-3-653-03541-4
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Undine Frömming
Virtual Environments and Cultures
A Collection of Social Anthropological Research in Virtual Cultures and Landscapes
E-Book
07/2013
150th Edition
Peter Lang Verlag
€101.69
Available for download
Person
Urte Undine Frömming, born 1970 in Eutin (Germany), is junior professor at the Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology and the head of the Master's Program in Visual and Media Anthropology at Freie Universität Berlin. She has completed several visual anthropological fieldwork studies in Eastern Indonesia, in East-Africa (Tanzania), in Iceland and in the virtual world of Second Life. She is a member of the work group «Visual Anthropology» at the German Anthropological Association (DGV) and member of the European Forum for the Study of Religion and the Environment.
Content
Contents: Urte Undine Froemming: Entangled Realities in Virtuality - Emily Smith: [Dis]Orientation: Mapping in Second Life - Christina Voigt: From Wilderness to Virtuality: Virtual Nature and Landscape in Second Life - Josefine Borrmann: Place and Non-Place in Second Life - Alina Trebbin: Waiting for Zowie: Notes from the Digital Uterus - Sarah Kiani: Crossing Boundaries or Reinforcing Norms? Gender Performances in Second Life - Elena Quintarelli: The Amazon of Aquarius: An Ethnographic Journey Through Gender Issues in Second Life - Emma Corbett-Ashby: Queer and Trans Experience in Second Life: An Experimental Dialogue - Katharina Frucht: Virtual Romance: Love Relationships in Second Life - Julia Zaremba: Furries - Ranty R. Islam: Cyberspace and the Sacred - Thomas John: Religiosity in a Virtual World: Reasons and Motivations - Manizhe Ali: Muslims and the Virtual - Mike Terry: Tabernacle in the Wilderness: Hierophany in Virtual Space - Tobias R. Becker: Virtual Representations of the Middle East Conflict - Sara Ferrari/Tiina Kivelae: Becoming an Activist in Virtual Worlds - Experiences of Social Activism in Second Life - Samantha Fox: Listen to the Radio: AM Radio, Second Life, and Innovations in an Emerging Medium - Lidia Rossner: Art Production and its Conceptual Systems in Second Life - Jordana Goldmann: Second Life: Exploring Virtual Space and its Creative Possibilities - Fidel Devkota: The Story of a Digital Samurai.