((in)ter)dependence/Communities of Practise
Appears in Misplaced Concretism and Concrete Situations: Feminism, Method, and Information Technology (Susan Leigh Star, 1994, find it here on the bootleg library), that builds on the concept from Situated learning: Legitimate peripheral participation (Lave and Wenger, 1992).
A community of practise... ... is composed of people and things, themselves in ecological relation...> > > check ecological relations ... as a term emphasizes the ways in which people work together and act together to form communities ... is a way of talking about a linked web of actions, people, and artifacts
Objects in a community of practise... ... come to be only in the context and action and use ... exhibit a level of familiarity, 'taken-for-grantedness' ... are on a trajectory of naturalization ─┬─────────────┬───────────── │ └ the removal of contingencies of an object's creation and its situated nature │ [first computer rolls around and we're all Really aware of it but now smartphones are │ just a part of us, they have become naturalized, a part of our lives │ and the landscape, it's historical context is no longer that important] └ it is not predetermined an object will ever become naturalized or how long it will remain so
People in a community of practise... ... are considered 'newcomer' not through their relation with other people in the community but through their relation with the objects in the community ... are on a trajectory of membership ───────────────────────────────── (which ranges from illegitimate peripheral participation to full membership) that consists of a series of encounters with the objects in the community and increasingly being in a naturalized relationship with them