Situating Hobby Drone Practices
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Julia M. Hildebrand
Abstract
Consumer drones are entering everyday spaces with increasing frequency and impact as more and more hobbyists use the aerial tool for recreational photography and videography. In this article, I seek to expand the common reference to drones as “unmanned aircraft systems” by conceptualising the hobby drone practice more broadly as a heterogeneous, mobile assemblage of virtual and physical practices and human and non-human actors. Drawing on initial ethnographic fieldwork and interviews with drone hobbyists as well as ongoing cyber-ethnographic research on social networking sites, this article gives an overview of how the mobile drone practice needs to be situated alongside people, things, and data in physical and virtual spheres. As drone hobbyists set out to fly their devices at a given time and place, a number of relations reaching across atmospheric (e. g. weather conditions, daylight hours, GPS availability), geographic (e. g. volumetric obstacles), mobile (e. g. flight restrictions, ground traffic), and social (e. g. bystanders) dimensions demand attention. Furthermore, when drone operators share their aerial images online, visual (e. g. live stream) and cyber-social relations (e. g. comments, scrutiny) come into play, which may similarly impact the drone practice in terms of the pilot’s performance. While drone hobbysists appear to be interested in keeping a “low profile” in the physical space, many pilots manage a comparatively “high profile” in the virtual sphere with respect to the sharing of their images. Since the recreational trend brings together elements of convergence, location-awareness, and real-time feedback, I suggest approaching consumer drones as, what Scott McQuire (2016) terms, “geomedia.” Moreover, consumer drones open up different “cybermobilities” (Adey/Bevan 2006) understood as connected movement that flows through and shapes both physical and virtual spaces simultaneously. The way that many drone hobbyists appear to navigate these different environments, sometimes at the same time, has methodological implications for ethnographic research on consumer drones. Ultimately, the assemblage-perspective brings together aviation-related and socio-cultural concerns relevant in the context of consumer drones as digital communication technology and visual production tool.
© 2018 by transcript Verlag
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Articles in the same Issue
- Titelei
- Content
- Introduction Mobile Digital Practices. Situating People, Things, and Data
- I. Field Research and Case Studies
- The MicroSDs of Solomon Islands An Offline Remittance Economy of Digital Multi-Media
- In the Footsteps of Smartphone-Users Traces of a Deferred Community in Ingress and Pokémon Go
- Digital Mediation, Soft Cabs, and Spatial Labour
- So ‘Hot’ Right Now Reflections on Virality and Sociality from Transnational Digital China
- Twitter in Place Examining Seoul’s Gwanghwamun Plaza through Social Media Activism
- Screen Screen Tourism
- Audiences, Aesthetics and Affordances Analysing Practices of Visual Communication on Social Media
- Mobile Mediated Visualities An Empirical Study of Visual Practices on Instagram
- ‘Re-appropriating’ Facebook? Web API mashups as Collective Cultural Practice
- II. Entering the Field
- Situating Hobby Drone Practices
- The Inchoate Field of Digital Offline A Reflection on Studying Mobile Media Practices of Digital Subalterns in India
- Mad Practices and Mobilities Bringing Voices to Digital Ethnography
- An Experimental Autoethnography of Mobile Freelancing
- III. In Conversation with …
- The Practice of Practice
- Biographical Notes