2019
DOI: 10.1108/jd-03-2019-0044
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Genres and situational appropriation of information

Abstract: Purpose Information science research has begun to broaden its traditional focus on information seeking to cover other modes of acquiring information. The purpose of this paper is to move forward on this trajectory and to present a framework for explicating how in addition to being sought, existing information are made useful and taken into use. Design/methodology/approach A conceptual enquiry draws on an empirical vignette based on an observation study of an archaeological teaching excavation. The conceptual… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
6
0

Year Published

2021
2021
2023
2023

Publication Types

Select...
4
2

Relationship

1
5

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 12 publications
(6 citation statements)
references
References 111 publications
(130 reference statements)
0
6
0
Order By: Relevance
“…The existing literature on information seeking for coping with cancer could benefit from further analyses of how cancer patients establish trust when seeking information while coping with serious illness as well as analyses of the information seeking behaviour of cancer patients as communities of practice. Furthermore, Huvila (2019) discusses how information is also made useful and taken into use in the course of information work. More specifically, building on the notions of genre and situational appropriation, Huvila addresses that in addition to being sought, existing information are made useful and taken into use.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The existing literature on information seeking for coping with cancer could benefit from further analyses of how cancer patients establish trust when seeking information while coping with serious illness as well as analyses of the information seeking behaviour of cancer patients as communities of practice. Furthermore, Huvila (2019) discusses how information is also made useful and taken into use in the course of information work. More specifically, building on the notions of genre and situational appropriation, Huvila addresses that in addition to being sought, existing information are made useful and taken into use.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The notion of information discovery (Wilson, 2021;Proper & Bruza, 1999, most often used in accidental information discovery, e.g., Erdelez, 1997) encompasses in broader terms "passive" and unanticipated encounters with information (Erdelez & Makri, 2020) that go beyond formal or informal seeking and acquisition. Further, the concept of situational appropriation addresses situations when already known information is seized into a new use, that is, where the discovery or serendipitous encounter happens with a novel situation instead of new information (Huvila, 2019b;Huvila et al, 2015;Julien & Michels, 2004). Besides, information use is sometimes utilized to refer to acquiring and handling rather than merely consuming, employing, exploiting, and refining information and creating (Suorsa & Huotari, 2014) or absorbing (Vasconcelos et al, 2018) knowledge.…”
Section: Information Takingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When used in this sense, taking would cover both active and passive uptake and experience, or as Ingold (2017) puts it, the spectrum from volitional doing to undergoing it. In comparison to terms such as information acquisition (Savolainen, 2016) or information discovery (Wilson, 2021), taking has the potential to encompass a broader variety of modalities of how information comes into use beyond mere discovery from seeking, non-seeking (Manheim, 2014) and even "not-seeking" (Huvila, 2019b) to actual uptake and eventual transformations that make it ready for use. Instead of trying to define where browsing, searching, or passive seeking starts and ends, they can be all be conceptualized as interlinked facets or modes of information taking.…”
Section: Information Takingmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Because of Andersen, rhetorical genre theory has gained traction in LIS. Scholars have looked at genre labeling of webpages (Santini, 2008), the use and implications of rhetorical genre theory in conceptualizing scholarly communication (Gullbekk, 2016;Nuria, 2011), disciplinary communities and specific genres within those communities (Gorichanaz, 2017b;Huvila, 2019;Nahotko, 2016;Schreiber, 2014), and applying rhetorical genre theory within information literacy instruction (Burkholder, 2010;Jankowski, 2018;Leebaw, 2018;Mills, 2014;Simmons, 2005). Researchers have combined rhetorical genre theory with existing theories and frameworks for information behavior (Gorichanaz, 2017b;Gullbekk, 2016;Huvila, 2019;Schreiber, 2014), but none have used rhetorical genre theory to form a coherent theoretical framework for talking about format in information behavior.…”
Section: Rhetorical Genre Theory In Information Behaviormentioning
confidence: 99%