Friday, 25 April 2014

Digital Anthropology is Here


Digital Anthropology is Here

Digital Anthropology is an important new field of study deserving increased recognition. The Information Age phenomenon of information-overload is relentlessly advancing in a new way, one that our ancestors could never have adequately prepared us for. “Knowledge is power” is now “Knowledge is endless”, and endless consumption is exhausting. Things like endlessly cross-referenced wikiwalks, endless music and podcast options, endless online interest groups, etc. - options, if virtually limitless in quantity - are then necessarily limited by our own finite human capacity to partake in them. The myriad ways in which we do this, and in which we share in these experiences, are the subject of this new field of study known as Digital Anthropology.
Digital and Cyborg Anthropology are two aspects in this emerging crossing of fields that study how social media, electronic communications, telepresence, interactive robotics, big data, and emerging technologies influence and are influenced-by anthropology both in our relationships, and in our own identities, respectively. These emerging fields essentially study the living of modern man as-identified-with all of his ever-expanding means of presence and communication. Digital Anthropology defines and supports this exciting evolution in human culture, and merits increasing attention as a field of research just as our capacity to relate to others also increases.
The Ethnography of Digital Anthropologists –that is to say, the field-work of documenting and understanding cultural phenomenon- tends to have similar methods as to traditional forms of anthropology, though with new tools for the same purposes:
Unlike a traditional anthropologist who might go to another country, city, or place to do their research, the digital anthropologist must travel through the Internet to locate the field site. And just as a traditional ethnographer has their set of tools (tape recorder, field notebook, videocamera, kinship diagrams) the digital ethnographer must have a set of tools for understanding and recording the digital space. Screencapture software, website archiving tools, servers, blogs and content management systems are common tools of digital ethnographers. They are the equivalent of the audio recorder and journal. (Case)
Personally, I have ever been surrounded-with and have identified with in-groups and out-groups, in every aspect of my life: I am a son of immigrants though not an immigrant, an English speaker whose first and family tongue was Spanish, a faithful believer enrapt of the simplicity of the natural world, an introvert always appreciative of social graces and the sharing of beauty. In politics, in race, in language, in religion, in interpersonal dynamics, I have always been either caught-between or embracing both sides of most dualities. Now, seeing how advancing high technology in-my-lifetime ever-more encroaches from the disparaged realm of rocket-scientist pocket-protector nerd-dom, to the now polished and refined image of always-connected cyber-geekery by way of Apples and Androids, I am fascinated by this phenomenon unprecedented in human history of exponential connectivity. As the rowers keep on rowing, and they show no sign of slowing, and as the zeitgeist of power moves ever into the field of connectivity (if not always with a humane awareness), I throw-in my lot to studying and advancing our adapting to these ever-expanding means within our limited natural and cultural abilities.
I first considered my interest in psychology rather narrow, as the individual is always present in many groups, and groups are often divided against one-another, drawing stark contrasts between themselves that we as individuals so often identify with. Being an online student, I have seen every day how social media such as text messaging, facebook and twitter are becoming not just more a part of daily life, but also a factor affecting daily life via news reports on trends, and how big-data is being ever more used for everything from marketing to census-data and health-care. We have always identified with our effects, from philosophy, to law, to religion and politics. Now that our effects and abilities are extending well-beyond our physical presence, the bridging fields of electronic communications and anthropology are necessarily interacting more and faster to keep up, with an information age phenomenon that none of our ancestors could have properly equipped us to deal with. Our modern society is suffering growing pains to adapt.
Even within the world of Anthropology and social science, how best to formalize and expand the methods and character of Digital Anthropology has been a topic of discussion. While the Digital Anthropology Interest Group (“DANG, for fun”) has become an established interest group that is both within and without the American Anthropology Association (Thompson, Some DANG history: Who are we and what are we doing here?), even if they should participate within the structure of the Association at all has been something of a concern, since there are plenty of means available for those with this interest to communicate their research and findings. Working within established structure, if not solely within, is one way DANG has decided to best be of service to their goal of Open Access of research, and though the interest group is exclusive to AAA members -as-an-interest-group-, they also share and blog online to meet this goal, as well as to animate the AAA, as Matt Thompson of DANG puts it “kicking and screaming into the twenty-first century”:
We want a different publication regime that includes Open Access principles and more recognition paid towards legitimating online activities for hiring, promotion, and tenure; we want everyone from the rank-and-file to Big Name Professors to join us in using net platforms for teaching, research, and communication.
These changes are not going to happen on their own. The AAA is not going to see the light unless WE flip the switch. Instead of giving up on our admittedly stodgy professional association, I am suggesting that we get inside the damn thing and take it over.
If the primary focus of this interest group lies outside the AAA then we shouldn’t organize under the AAA in the first place. If everyone is envisioning a collective that joins forces with international, cross-disciplinary organizations embracing all the net has to offer in linking everything and everyone in a new and truly global anthropology… fine. But then we’re talking about a whole other ball of wax. In that case the AAA would be a burden and we should just bypass it entirely.
If people want a AAA interest group then we’re going to have to be much more circumspect in what we actually do. As a AAA interest group our energies must be directed towards (1) fomenting change within the AAA, to bring it kicking and screaming into the twenty-first century, and (2) serving the AAA membership, so that those of us who are wired can share our expertise and that others might be educated on why the issues that matter to us are important.
Is this parochial? Indubitably. Is this going to change the world? No, its only going to change our small part of it. But you gotta start somewhere, right? (Thompson)
In similar fashion to the ongoing work of Digital Anthropology and related emergent fields in understanding and learning about how we use and identify with technology more and more, Digital Archaeologists are reviving one of the earliest open-access online social platforms from twenty years ago, in 1994 Amsterdam, the Digital City:
This rudimentary social-media platform, launched in Amsterdam twenty years ago and known as the Digital City (or by its Dutch acronym DDS), was one of the earliest virtual public domains and a precursor to the modern Internet. But the software that kept it buzzing with activity until 2000 is now virtually lost. The challenge of retrieving and preserving this and other web artifacts has given rise to a new profession: web archaeologist. 
“If we don't do anything, then an important piece of digital cultural heritage will be lost,” says Tjarda de Haan, the first official web archeologist at the Amsterdam Museum. She is leading a far-ranging effort to rebuild the Digital City for virtual tours by future generations.
When DDS opened in 1994, it was one of the first social media platforms in the world, the first Dutch virtual community and the world’s first public-domain virtual city. Conceived as a virtual space for independent groups, from artists to culture organizations, the hub grew from 10,000 members in 1994 to 400,000 by 2000. (Teffer)
Digital Anthropology is here. It has arrived as celebrated and intrusive to all that has come before it as the Information Age, Refrigerated Transport, Television, and the Railroad. Be it in the study and reviving of its earliest forms for posterity, or its vanguard in ushering in a new age of global understanding, Digital Anthropology is here to stay. It is best we take notice.


Works Cited

Case, Amber. "Digital Ethnography." Cyborg Anthropology. 25 04 2014. Web Article. <http://cyborganthropology.com/Digital_Ethnography>.
Teffer, Peter. "In Amsterdam, web archaeologists excavate a digital city." The Christian Science Monitor 29 03 2014. 25 04 2014. <http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Europe/2014/0329/In-Amsterdam-web-archaeologists-excavate-a-digital-city>.
Thompson, Matt. "Digital Anthropology Group: Are we sure we want this thing inside the AAA?" 29 02 2012. Savage Minds: Notes and Queries in Anthropology. anthropology community weblog. 25 04 2014. <http://savageminds.org/2012/02/29/digital-anthropology-group-are-we-sure-we-want-this-thing-inside-the-aaa/>.
—. Some DANG history: Who are we and what are we doing here? 17 08 2012. 25 04 2014. <https://01anthropology.wordpress.com/2012/08/17/some-dang-history-who-are-we-and-what-are-we-doing-here/>.