It is no longer easy to adopt deterministic explanations of scholarly communication,
technology or the information chain. Complex and reflexive relations have built up
between the substantive and methodological literatures relevant to these topics. This
thesis aims to explore these relations with reference to two sets of interviews, one with
academicr esearchersa nd the other with information professionals. These interviews
were conducted in 1998-9 during the FIDDO Project, a part of the UK Joint Information
Systems Committee `Electronic Libraries Programme'.
Two major theoretical perspectives are employed to support two analytic methodologies.
The first is social constructivism, which is representedm ethodologically in the thesis by
discourse analysis. The second is actor-network theory, which is represented
methodologically by co-word analysis. Both of these approaches are engaged in
questions of relativism and realism in social explanation.
The implementation of each of the methodologies involves innovative moves. The
discourse analysis is focused on personal deixis (self-reference) located by pronoun-use,
and on interest management. The co-word analysis is adapted from a scientometric
technique and supplemented by the use of categorical definitions of the three topics.
Each methodology is employed to analyse both sets of interviews. The four resulting sets
of findings are presented in terms of the boundaries apparent between the three topical
concepts.
The boundaries between scholarly communication, technology and the information chain
are found to vary, for example according to the identities of the interviewees responsible
for the data. They also vary according to the methodology employed. Discourse analysis of interviews with information professionals suggests that the idea of technology is
deployed as a dual repertoire, consisting of empowerment and automation, and that the
pattern of this deployment is one constituent of the contested boundaries between the
three topics. Co-word analysis of the same interviews suggests that an important focus of
the boundaries is around the idea of electronic journals. Discourse analysis of interviews
with academicr esearchersa lso reveals use of the dual technology repertoire, but in
addition suggests that the category of formal scholarly communication acts to legitimate
the interests of researchers. Co-word analysis of the same interviews suggests that a
number of models of document access were in play, including those based on the library,
on paper and on documents. The implications of these substantive analyses include that
studies based on `user needs' or the `impact of technology' could benefit from an analysis
of how such topics are constructed in particular accounts.
Finally, the question is addressed as to the extent that the results of the discourse and the
co-word analyses (of the same data) are compatible so that they can be meaningfully
synthesised. That is, do the two approaches give rise to outcomes that have similar
epistemological status? The question is answered `empirically' with reference to the
issueo f reflexivity as it is configured in the two approachesa, nd it is confirmed that the
two types of outcome are not compatible due to profound differences in the positions
adopted by their respective informing theories. The methodological implications of this
include that those engaged in relativist research practice need to be aware the ways in
which epistemological and reflexive issues are relevant to their actions.