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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Metatheoretical Snowmen Ii, Jenna K. Hartel, Jonathan Furner, Soo Young Rieh, Nicolas Belkin, Michael Ollsen, Marcia Bates, Andrew Dillon Jan 2011

Metatheoretical Snowmen Ii, Jenna K. Hartel, Jonathan Furner, Soo Young Rieh, Nicolas Belkin, Michael Ollsen, Marcia Bates, Andrew Dillon

Jenna Hartel

Metatheory is the highest level conceptual device used in research and determines a way of thinking and speaking about reality and its information behavior. Today, numerous metatheories exist in information studies and create a dynamic climate, yet also some confusion. This panel aims to demystify methatheory by addressing the matter in a playful, comparative, competitive spirit. Articulate champions of five major metatheories will be given an opportunity to cast their metatheory onto the life and information experience of an ordinary and affable persona: a snowman. The vivid renderings of the snowman and its information world will bring the features of …


Information In The Hobby Of Gourmet Cooking - Four Contexts, Jenna K. Hartel Jan 2011

Information In The Hobby Of Gourmet Cooking - Four Contexts, Jenna K. Hartel

Jenna Hartel

This chapter aims to characterize the information activities and information resources that underlie the hobby of gourmet cooking in America. Gourmet cooking has roots in French haute cuisine and is a manner of food preparation that entails high quality or exotic ingredients and advanced technical skills (Wilson 2003). It is featured today at many high end or “white tablecloth” restaurants, associated with cultural icon Julia Child, and has been adopted by millions of Americans as a hobby. Given its complexity to execute, gourmet cooking is information intensive and generates a vast multimedia information universe. Altogether, this hobby is a rich …


The Future Of Information History, Jenna K. Hartel, Thomas Haigh, Ronald Day Jan 2011

The Future Of Information History, Jenna K. Hartel, Thomas Haigh, Ronald Day

Jenna Hartel

This panel discusses developments in the scholarship of information history and speculates on its future. Previously, history was a distinct mode of research and a specialty community within information science; it operated largely outside of the mainstream scholarship that was underway within the dominant empirical and rational paradigms. Today, more social and culturally-oriented approaches have gained momentum across the discipline and these frameworks include an historical perspective as one dimension of their conceptual apparatus. As a result, an historical sensibility is now embedded more broadly across a larger swath of scholarship. This is an exciting and welcome development for champions …


Understanding Information Technology In The Home Via Photographs: A Detailed Analysis Of Swan And Taylor, Jenna Hartel Jan 2011

Understanding Information Technology In The Home Via Photographs: A Detailed Analysis Of Swan And Taylor, Jenna Hartel

Jenna Hartel

No abstract provided.


Introduction To The Special Issue On Ethnography, Jenna Hartel Jan 2011

Introduction To The Special Issue On Ethnography, Jenna Hartel

Jenna Hartel

This special issue of Faculty of Information Quarterly marks the second time a collection of papers has been featured from INF2330: The Information Experience in Context. The course, offered yearly at the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Information (iSchool), teaches students to identify and understand what is “informational” in any setting. Participants develop sharpened vision to discern informational patterns - that is, an ability to trace what Bates (1999) calls the “red thread” of information pervading life. By design, INF2330 exemplifies the interdisciplinary philosophy at the iSchool, bringing together advanced students from various paths (library and information science, critical information …