Author:
Comunello Francesca,Martire Fabrizio,Sabetta Lorenzo
Abstract
AbstractThis introduction chapter provides context and background to the concept of trace in social sciences, also presenting an overview of key concepts discussed in the subsequent chapters of this volume. Information that was not meant to be informative and evidence that did not expect to possess evidential character, traces are construed as evidence only from the vantage point of the observer, inadvertently left behind by those who produced the trace in the first place (indeed, awareness might change footprints and make them fade out). Conceived as clues rather than statements, traces prove to be useful for studying current social facts and individuals who have not yet vanished. This holds to be true especially in our contemporary platform society, due to its datafication processes and the ensuing quantification of features never quantified before; digital footprints determine the selection of the most relevant content or services to offer, creating accordingly personalized feedback. Thus, individual and collective online behavior leading to traces production is shaped by digital environments’ affordances and constraints; at the same time, such socio-technically situated traces retroact over digital systems (by fueling algorithms and predictive models), thus reinforcing, or questioning, the power relations at stake. Conclusively, a brief remark is made on future research possibilities associated with the sociology of traces.
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Reference86 articles.
1. Airoldi, M. (2021). Machine habitus: Toward a sociology of algorithms. Polity.
2. Allen, A. (2016). The ‘three black teenagers’ search shows it is society, not Google, that is racist. The Guardian, June 10.
3. Atkinson, P. (2018). The spirit of abduction. Contemporary Sociology, 47(4), 415–417.
4. Bacharach, M., & Gambetta, D. (2001). Trust in signs. In K. S. Cook (Ed.), Trust and society (pp. 148–184). Russell Sage Foundation.
5. Bardiot, C. (2021). Performing arts and digital humanities: From traces to data. Wiley.
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献