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          Forepaper by
         Bella
         Dicks and Bruce
         Masonfor Messenger Morphs the Media
         99
 
         
          The Production of Hypermedia Ethnography.
          There is a world beyond hyperfiction.  We hope.
         Dicks and Mason are one year into a
         two
         year research project to investigate the usefulness of
         hypertext/media in ethnography.   Our remit covers
         both the usefulness of hypertext in helping to analyse
         social science research and its ability to communicate that
         research in novel ways to others.  In this presentation
         we will briefly outline some of the challenges we face and
         the opportunities we perceive.  We will also consider
         some of the implications for hypertext scholarship that our
         work seems to be engendering.
 So what exactly is ethnography?At it's simplest ethnography is the "thick" description
         of culture.  As an active process it is the act of the
         researcher participating in/observing some self defined
         community in order to understand it.  As a product it
         is a, written, text of the ethnographer's findings. 
         Unlike statistical analyses produced through quantitative
         research, ethnography focuses on the more implicitly
         interpretative, and subjective, interpretations derived from
         qualitative research.  Unsurprisingly ethnographic
         texts share as much in common with travelogs and novels as
         they do with academic reports....
 
            Nyakanjata is weary after twenty-two episodes as Bill has
            counted them.  Her very weariness dissociates her,
            makes her quit her superficial efforts... and lets the
            deep effect, impelled by the accumulative power of the
            medicines and the communications with the spirit, take
            place.  The Sakutoha tooth slips quietly out into
            the horn, and is safely held by Singleton."  (Edith
            Turner, Experiencing Ritual, p.105.  The end
            of chapter 5.)
           Unsurprisingly also, ethnography has been taken to
         task by the same post-modern, post-structuralist critiques
         that fiction has.  (If you really want to know more
         read
         our
         article in Sociological Research Online,
         particularly sections 2.2 - 2.5.) One response to this has
         been to widen the range of rhetorical forms, so we see
         ethnographic poetry, montages, fragments, performance art
         and so on.  Our intent is to investigate the
         possibilities of ethnographic hypertexts, our to coin a
         term, Ethnographic Hypermedia Environments (EHEs).
 So where is this going?The questions we are exploring deal with how do we use a
         hypertext environment to adequately portray ethnographic
         findings?  The exploratory rhetoric of hyper fiction
         can be quite usefully adapted to ethnography.  To quote
         ourselves:
         
          Hypermedia potentially favours an expanded and more
         complex object of study, as well as inviting an experimental
         mode of authoring. These potentialities are enshrined in two
         principal advantages that hypermedia can offer the
         ethnographer. Firstly, there is the possibility of creating
         all kinds of multiple links between both the data assembled
         and the interpretative texts which comment upon these data
         (Howard, 1988). This facility allows the object of study to
         breach the boundaries of the research setting itself, since
         connections can be made with all kinds of intertextual
         resonances in mind. Different types of interpretation can be
         accommodated, so that both the voices of participants and
         the author's commentary can be more creatively integrated.
         For example, most hypertexts allow the creation of 'paths'
         through the hypertext with appropriate labelling, so that
         the linkages and ruptures between interpretation, the data
         presented and the potential 'intertexts' of the ethnography
         itself can be more explicitly foregrounded. Whilst these
         pathways are designed to guide the reader in the direction
         of authorial argumentation and/or suggestion, the very
         accessibility and 'proximity' of the data  texts may
         open up channels for innovative interpretation and
         reinterpretation - both in the analytic phase and in the
         presentational phase.
         
          Secondly, there is the provision for readers to trace
         their own paths through these chains of links. As soon as
         one introduces multiple links into a hypertextual document
         (rather than merely having a linear sequential link from one
         'page' to the next), the author can no longer control how a
         reader will progress through the environment created, and
         which directions s/he will choose to pursue (although the
         hidden hand of the author can be somewhat heavier than the
         reader realizes). Associations and lines of enquiry can
         thereby emerge in the act of reading that may not be
         predicted in advance by the author. Although there is
         nothing inherent to the provision of multiple pathways or
         trails in EHEs that will push the reader into constructing
         pathways of their own, the presentation of interlinking
         avenues of enquiry and the facility for switching among them
         aims to encourage readers to approach the ethnographic
         environment as a shifting matrix of connections rather than
         a fixed grid of self-contained narratives. However, the
         actual usage that readers make of such potential remains a
         matter for empirical investigation, and we hope to make use
         of technical facilities for mapping and recording the
         directions that actual readers take.
         
          Thus, hypermedia, potentially, enables both the
         complexity of the object of study and the mode of its
         representation to be more fully and flexibly articulated. Of
         course, a writer can never control how a reader will
         interact with a traditional printed book either, so we are
         not suggesting here that a radically new form of
         communication is enabled by hypermedia environments. Any
         text is capable of being read in a non-linear mode. In fact,
         one can  argue that a computer-based hypertext is more
         limiting than a written text. With the latter, one can
         physically 'link' from any word in the text to any word in
         any other text whereas a reader of a computer-based
         hypertext can only follow the links created by the author,
         rendering the reader less free to create  their own
         interpretations (see Aarseth, 1997: pp. 77 - 78). What is
         innovative about ethnographic hypermedia environments
         (EHEs), however, is that the potential for cross-referencing
         and for multiple linkages is integral to the medium itself,
         and can inform all phases of the research process.
         (Dicks
         and Mason 3.4 - 3.6)
 So what's the problem?We are encountering several difficulties.  Firstly
         there is no adequate software that does what we want. 
         Part of the aim is to develop hypertexts that require the
         minimum in technological competence from author and
         reader.  Currently we are building the links in
         StorySpace which does not handle any media but text and
         basic images.  Yet our interest is in integrating
         various media, we have over 25 hours of video footage to
         include.  So we will need to convert the whole package
         over to Authorware at a later date, a clunky solution at
         best.  Then, having chosen StorySpace for its ease of
         use and sophisticated linking we discovered that it's most
         advanced feature, the "path browser" does not support "text
         links."  This is crucial because....
         
          EHEs have big, big nodes. 
         
          The major part of our EHE is the data.  It contains
         55 transcribed interviews (over 1500 paper pages) in
         addition to the video footage we would like to include,
         specifically about 10 hours of documentary style "fly on the
         wall footage" which is untranscribable.  Naturally we
         need each transcript to be a node, as the represent single,
         whole, entities.  However our longest are nearly 200K
         in size as plain text files, which means that StorySpace
         needs six nodes to hold them.  The question is how do
         we make such big nodes easy to navigate for the
         reader?  Rather than excerpt quotes from people and
         including it in interpretative text we would like the reader
         to follow trails which take them directly to the relevant
         part of interview so that the reader may then choose how
         much of the interview to read.  However a 200K long
         plain text file is a nightmare on a computer screen. 
         Handling big nodes is proving one of the more problematic
         aspects of the endeavour.
         
          Finally, how do you author academically rigorous
         hypertexts?  A simple question, with a difficult
         answer.  It is a question of academic rhetoric and the
         construction of argumentation in hypertext.  Academic
         argumentation follows 2000 years of linear
         disputation.  How do we, as academics, present
         non-linear argumentation.  We do not want to fall into
         the limiting Computer Assisted Learning paradigm that seems
         to have dominated non-fiction hypertexts, rather we want to
         explore the innovative, if not always successful, fictions
         that have attempted to push the boundaries of hypertext.
         
          Our interest then is in learning how other hypertext
         authors have dealt with cognate issues.  From our
         perspective, we suspect that some of the issues we have to
         deal with in authoring EHEs will be of interest to those
         authoring hypertext fictions..
         
          
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