This article explores the potential role of sustained social media use in longitudinal qualitative research. We introduce the research design and methodology of a research project exploring sustained use (five or more years) of the social network site Facebook among young people in their twenties. By focusing on this group, we seek to uncover how ‘growing up’ stories are told and archived online, and how disclosure practices (what people say and share on social media) change over time. We question how we can understand the ‘digital trace’ inscribed through the Facebook Timeline as a longitudinal narrative text. We argue that ‘scrolling back’ through Facebook with participants as ‘co-analysts’ of their own digital traces can add to the quali...
Online social networks provide access to the user’s information for long periods of time after the i...
This paper describes the development of ‘case histories’ from a qualitative longitudinal data set th...
Drawing on findings from qualitative interviews and photo elicitation, this paper explores young peo...
Now in operation for over a decade, Facebook comes to serve as a digital record of life for young pe...
Commentary on the article “What autobiographical narratives tell us about the life course. Contribut...
This article focuses on self-narratives and identity construction in the context of social networkin...
Facebook\u27s transition to the Timeline profile design brought with it a new focus: Life storytelli...
Following calls to rethink the repertoires of social research and take advantage of the new possibil...
Since its launch in 2004, Facebook has promoted an ethos of sharing and connecting with friends. Fro...
In this chapter I accept the argument that storytelling is a basic human impulse and suggest that Fa...
This article proposes a three-part conceptualisation of the use of Facebook in ethnographic research...
Much excitement, public and scholastic, surrounds the ascent of Facebook, a social-networking websit...
This thesis investigated one ongoing life storytelling project, Humans of New York (HoNY) and, in pa...
The growing use of social media means that an increasing amount of people’s lives are visible online...
This article explores some of the challenges of conducting longitudinal studies relating to emotiona...
Online social networks provide access to the user’s information for long periods of time after the i...
This paper describes the development of ‘case histories’ from a qualitative longitudinal data set th...
Drawing on findings from qualitative interviews and photo elicitation, this paper explores young peo...
Now in operation for over a decade, Facebook comes to serve as a digital record of life for young pe...
Commentary on the article “What autobiographical narratives tell us about the life course. Contribut...
This article focuses on self-narratives and identity construction in the context of social networkin...
Facebook\u27s transition to the Timeline profile design brought with it a new focus: Life storytelli...
Following calls to rethink the repertoires of social research and take advantage of the new possibil...
Since its launch in 2004, Facebook has promoted an ethos of sharing and connecting with friends. Fro...
In this chapter I accept the argument that storytelling is a basic human impulse and suggest that Fa...
This article proposes a three-part conceptualisation of the use of Facebook in ethnographic research...
Much excitement, public and scholastic, surrounds the ascent of Facebook, a social-networking websit...
This thesis investigated one ongoing life storytelling project, Humans of New York (HoNY) and, in pa...
The growing use of social media means that an increasing amount of people’s lives are visible online...
This article explores some of the challenges of conducting longitudinal studies relating to emotiona...
Online social networks provide access to the user’s information for long periods of time after the i...
This paper describes the development of ‘case histories’ from a qualitative longitudinal data set th...
Drawing on findings from qualitative interviews and photo elicitation, this paper explores young peo...