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Embodied Excess: Interpreting Haptic Mobile Media Practices

a Edith Cowan University, Australia
b RMIT University, Australia

Data Excess in Digital Media Research

ISBN: 978-1-80455-945-1, eISBN: 978-1-80455-944-4

Publication date: 8 November 2024

Abstract

This chapter considers how phenomenology and ethnography can be combined as an interpretive strategy for studying mobile media practices in everyday life. We argue that haptic methodologies in mobile media research generate an overflow of data that are often difficult to capture in written form. The dilemma of data excess is discussed in the context of a 4-year research project on gendered mobile media practices, exploring how mobile devices are often intertwined with the experience of bodily safety in urban environments. Our primary aim was to investigate the relationship between networked connectivity, mobile media and perceptions of risk in terms of bodily experience, including affective or emotional feelings. This chapter focuses on the haptic methods and techniques used during home visits with participants and the various ways that the volume and density of data are subsequently thinned out to become manageable and publishable. We first situate our research within haptic and mobile media studies, followed by an explanation of phenomenology and how it can be used to inform ethnographic methods in ways that are particularly useful for researching haptic media practices. This chapter then provides some examples of how the data are always in excess, an overflow resulting from the variability and individuality of participant experience and the difficulty of describing and accounting for personal histories and feelings. Finally, we show how the data can be strategically ‘contained’ in the process of writing for the purposes of publication, thematic framing and knowledge translation.

Keywords

Citation

Hardley, J. and Richardson, I. (2024), "Embodied Excess: Interpreting Haptic Mobile Media Practices", Hendry, N.A. and Richardson, I. (Ed.) Data Excess in Digital Media Research, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 87-104. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80455-944-420241007

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2025 Jess Hardley and Ingrid Richardson. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited