posted on 2024-03-26, 22:39authored byHilary Yerbury, Pethigamage Perera, Michael Olsson
Introduction. The findings of a study of the information practices of devotees and monks associated
with a Buddhist temple are used to examine the way place is understood, and to evaluate the strengths
and weaknesses of the conceptualisations presented in the literature.
Methods. An insider approach facilitated the collection of data through interviews of monks and
devotees, observations and analysis of websites and social media platforms produced by the temple
community.
Analysis. Thematic analysis was used to analyse interview transcripts, the researcher’s field notes and
online content.
Results. Place can be physical, modified by time, symbolic, created through the affordances of
technology and organisational. Three categories of information practices emerged, being cultural,
everyday life and organisational information practices. Existing conceptualisations of place in
information research, including information grounds, information landscapes and space of flows were
insufficient to cover the ways that place was expressed in this study.
Conclusions. Understandings of place and associated information practices are tied to cultural
knowledge and beliefs. The outsider researcher may only make sense of data through the use of
metaphor or analogy. Further analytical and empirical work is essential to develop guidelines for
establishing appropriate metaphors