Privacy at the Margins| Technology in Rural Appalachia: Cultural Strategies of Resistance and Navigation

Zotero / D&S Group / Top-Level Items 2024-07-30

Item Type Journal Article Author Sherry Hamby Author Elizabeth Taylor Author Alli Smith Author Kimberly Mitchell Author Lisa Jones URL https://ijoc.org/index.php/ijoc/article/view/7052 Rights The International Journal of Communication is an academic journal. As such, it is dedicated to the open exchange of information. For this reason, IJoC is freely available to individuals and institutions. Copies of this journal or articles in this journal may be distributed for research or educational purposes free of charge and without permission. However, commercial use of the IJoC website or the articles contained herein is expressly prohibited without the written consent of the editor. Authors who publish in The International Journal of Communication will release their articles under the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives (by-nc-nd) license . 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If you have any questions about whether fair use applies to your uses of copyrighted material (whether it is text, images, audio-visual, or other) in your scholarship, simply include your rationale, grounded in the Best Practices, as a supplementary document with your submission. Volume 12 Pages 21 Publication International Journal of Communication ISSN 1932-8036 Date 2018-03-01 Extra Number: 0 Accessed 2024-07-30 14:46:43 Library Catalog ijoc.org Language en Abstract Existing research on technology in rural, low-income communities has focused primarily on financial obstacles and lack of infrastructure. We use a sociocultural framework for understanding technology in rural Appalachia, using a mixed-methods study of focus groups and interviews. Eight focus groups were held with a total of 65 people (58% female) from low-socioeconomic-status communities in rural Appalachia (ages 12 to 75). Then, in-depth interviews were conducted with 24 participants (62.5% female) on issues generated from focus groups. Participants reported ways of both resisting and navigating technology, many of which were deeply grounded in core Appalachian values, such as respect for privacy. Many participants were skeptical of the value of technology weighed against the loss of privacy, expressed regrets about the loss of self-reliance due to technology, and used self-deprecating humor as resistance. Participants reported numerous strategies for navigating technology risks and generally took an agentic approach to protecting themselves online. Many prominent themes in these transcripts show the ways that people from this community have reasserted their agency in their relationships with technology. Short Title Privacy at the Margins| Technology in Rural Appalachia