Interpreting the Community: Information Practices and/for Deviance

Drawing on an ethnographic study with online as well as offline components, this paper investigates information practices related to underground body modification procedures used to permanently (and subversively) alter one’s appearance. In contrast to procedures that have gained a degree of cultural acceptance, such as ear piercing or moderate tattooing, the practices at the center of this paper are much more extreme, and, importantly, often illegal. Eighteen individual interviews were conducted with people who had obtained, were interested in obtaining or had performed extreme body modification procedures, generating thick descriptions of practices related to researching, documenting and occluding these procedures. Using the constructs of information poverty and subcultural capital, analysis is centered on participants’ descriptions of maintaining social norms of secrecy; negotiating privacy across one’s social milieu; and the crucial role of community in perceptions of access to and uses of information. With a complex and holistic understanding of how this community uses information to navigate and enforce boundaries of insiders and outsiders, implications for theory and design are suggested.

Speaker Details

Jessa Lingel is a PhD candidate in the School of Communication and Information at Rutgers University. She has an MLIS from Pratt Institute and an MA in literary theory and gender studies from New York University. Her research interests include information practices of marginalized communities, emergent practices of social media, technological nostalgia and intersections of postmodern theory and librarianship. Find out more about her work at http://jessalingel.tumblr.com/

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Jessica Lingel