Date

New Book Available:
Inuit in Cyberspace: Embedding Offline Identities Online
By Neil Blair Christensen

For more information and to order please see:
http://www.mtp.dk/catalogue?m=bi&id=684


Dear Arctic Info Subscriber,

I am delighted to be able to write to you now and inform you that Inuit
in Cyberspace has recently been published. In this cyber-ethnography, I
explore the processes by which a wide selection of personal, local,
cultural and national identities are expressed and understood on the
Internet. The different Inuit peoples of the circumpolar Arctic have
always taken active part in the world, but their contemporary use of
Internet(s) has affected even more their relative isolation - one that
comes from living in a peripheral region of the world. Yet, Inuit and
others are constructing web pages with social and physical references
that sustain an imagined Arctic remoteness; a logic that seems to be a
key aspect of Inuit identities and cultures.

The book brings together in analysis and discussion the realities of
contemporary Inuit, the myth of cyberspace, a selection of dynamic
strategies for identification, as well as a discussion of online methods
for research. It concludes that Inuit dynamically remain Inuit, in all
their diversity, regardless of an imagined compression of time and
space; their use of changing technologies, or participation in enlarged
social networks. It carries a series of new perspectives for the
researched and the researcher.

Kind regards
Neil Blair Christensen

http://www.nbc.brygge.dk

Christensen, Neil Blair: Inuit in Cyberspace: Embedding Offline
Identities Online, 2003, 135 pages, ISBN 87-7289-723-6. Prices: $19, €
20, £14, DKK 148

Contents

Introduction: Shifting Boundaries

Modern Tradition
Escape Cyberspace
Old frontiers in new space

I Going Nowhere to get Everywhere

Online survey
E-mail interviews
Content analysis of web pages
Wanted: practical method

II (Re)producing the Arctic in Cyberspace

The myth of cyberspace
Peripherality on the Net
Three regions: Canadian Artic, Greenland, and Alaska
Bridging a gap?

III A Common Web of Difference and Similarity

Recursive dynamics: social boundaries and cultural stuff
Us and them: self-identify by identifying others
Taloyoak in cyberspace
Native language
Guestbooks
Intelligible boundaries

IV Perceiving Cyberspace

Engaging with the world
Disengaging from abstract theory

Continuity? Accept Change and Understand Context