Digital Liminalities: Understanding Isolated Communities on the Edge

要旨

This paper brings together three distinct case studies to explore how social isolation and notions of liminality shape ontological security within communities on "the edge" of society. Each case study exemplifies the differing nature of liminality in everyday contexts and the extent to which increased digitalisation perturbs it in multiple ways. Taking an ethnographic approach, the research engaged with seafarers onboard container ships in European waters, communities in Greenland and welfare claimants in the North East of England. It posits that technological innovation must attend to the routinisation of everyday life through which people establish ontological security if such innovation is to be supportive. The paper thus moves beyond existing HCI scholarship by foregrounding the contextual and relational aspects of social isolation rather than the technological. It does so by advocating a ground-up design process that considers ontological security in relation to notions of liminality among communities on the edge.

キーワード
Isolation
Communities
Liminality: Ontological Security
Design Principles
Ethnography
著者
Rikke Bjerg Jensen
Royal Holloway University of London, London, United Kingdom
Lizzie Coles-Kemp
Royal Holloway University of London, London, United Kingdom
Nicola Wendt
Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, United Kingdom
Makayla Lewis
University of the Arts London, London, United Kingdom
DOI

10.1145/3313831.3376137

論文URL

https://doi.org/10.1145/3313831.3376137

会議: CHI 2020

The ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (https://chi2020.acm.org/)

セッション: Under resourced & underrepresented communities

Paper session
316A MAUI
5 件の発表
2020-04-30 23:00:00
2020-05-01 00:15:00
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