In: Heidbrink, Simone ; Miczek, Nadja (Hrsgg.): Online - Heidelberg Journal of Religions on the Internet: Vol. 04.1 Special Issue on Aesthetics and the Dimensions of the Senses, (2010),
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Abstract
This article sketches the Cardean Ethnographic research method that emerged from two years of study inSecond Life’s Zen Buddhist cloud communities. Second Life is a 3D graphic virtual world housed in cyberspace that can be accessed via the Internet from any networked computer on the globe.Cloud communitiesare groups that are temporary, flexible, elastic and inexpensive in the social capital required to join or to leave. In our research, we found ourselves facing a two-sided methodological problem. We had to theorize the virtual and its relation to the actual, while simultaneously creating practices for an effective ethnographic method. Our solution,named after the Roman Goddess of the hinge, Cardea,was a method that uses the model of a hinge to theorize the virtual as desubtantialized and the worlds opened up by cyberspace as nondualistic. This understanding of the virtual worldscalled for a classic ethnographic methodbased on participant observation and thick description.
Document type: | Article |
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Editor: | Heidbrink, Simone ; Miczek, Nadja |
Journal or Publication Title: | Online - Heidelberg Journal of Religions on the Internet: Vol. 04.1 Special Issue on Aesthetics and the Dimensions of the Senses |
Date Deposited: | 24 Nov 2010 14:37 |
Date: | 2010 |
Faculties / Institutes: | Philosophische Fakultät > Institut für Religionswissenschaft |
DDC-classification: | 200 Religion |
Controlled Keywords: | Ästhetik, Wahrnehmung, Religion |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | Sinne , Internet , virtuelle Welten , Buddhismus , Second Lifesenses , internet , virtual worlds , Buddhism , Second Life |