Available Formats
Researching Everyday Childhoods: Time, Technology and Documentation in a Digital Age
By (Author) Professor Rachel Thomson
By (author) Liam Berriman
By (author) Dr Sara Bragg
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
25th January 2018
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Study and learning skills: general
Educational: General studies, educational skills and competencies
Education
Social research and statistics
Age groups: children
Sociology: family and relationships
Digital Lifestyle and online world: consumer and user guides
302.23083
Paperback
240
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
340g
This book is open access and available on www.bloomsburycollections.com. It is funded by the University of Sussex, UK. How can we know about childrens everyday lives in a digitally saturated world What is it like to grow up in and through new media What happens between the ages of 7 and 15 and does it make sense to think of maturation as mediated These questions are explored in this innovative book, which synthesizes empirical documentation of childrens everyday lives with discussions of key theoretical and methodological concepts to provide a unique guide to researching childhood and youth. Researching Everyday Childhoods begins by asking what recent post-empirical and post-digital frameworks can offer researchers of children and young peoples lives, particularly in researching and theorising how the digital remakes childhood and youth. The key ideas of time, technology and documentation are then introduced and are woven throughout the books chapters. Research-led, the book is informed by two state of the art empirical studies Face 2 Face and Curating Childhoods and links to a dynamic multimedia archive generated by the studies.
From its opening pages, the leading authors guide us through a nuanced engagement with key theoretical ideas about contemporary technological change and the lives of young people subtly synthesised with rich and detailed empirical case studies. This book, set apart from the rest, is tender and responsive to both the participants and the data. It is insightful in quite profound ways. This is a book from which to learn and to change one's practice as a researcher and a social thinker. * David Oswell, Professor of Sociology, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK *
From the very first page this compelling polyvocal book bursts with an abundance of detailed conceptual-methodological practices for understanding everyday childhoods and contemporary research. While demonstrating new commitments to the ethical labour required for care in research, it also provides an accessible guide to how we might all enact this in practice. Holding the research archive in mind from the beginning, this book is an instantiation of a transformed research practice, and I cannot wait to see the future archive of research that this text will inspire. * Niamh Moore, Chancellors Fellow and Deputy Director of Research (Ethics), University of Edinburgh, UK *
A fascinating and well-researched look at how kids and teens actually use, understand, and feel about digital media that provides an important counterpoint to moralizing and panic. By listening and working with young people, the authors provide a sorely-needed empirical perspective on a topic often characterized by sensationalism. * Alice Marwick, Assistant Professor, Media & Technology Studies, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, US *
Set to become the go-to text in how to do qualitative longitudinal research with children and young people. Impeccably written by some of the most prolific scholars in childhood and youth studies, the book offers inspiring, passionate as well as instructive and informative insights into contemporary childhood. * Sian Lincoln, Reader in Communication, Media and Youth Culture, Liverpool John Moores University, UK *
Rachel Thomson is Professor of Childhood and Youth Studies at the University of Sussex, UK. Liam Berriman is Lecturer in Digital Humanities/Social Science at the University of Sussex, UK. Sara Bragg is a Senior Research Fellow in the Education Research Centre, University of Brighton, UK.