ISBN:
9781538147412
Language:
English
Pages:
1 Online-Ressource (vi, 244 Seiten)
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als Reckoning with social media
DDC:
302.23/1
Keywords:
Social media
;
Electronic books
;
Social Media
;
Auswirkung
Abstract:
Social media use is pervasive, and so is it's perceived harmful effects, dubbed 'techlash'. Disconnection practices-restricting, detoxing, deleting-often reinforce rather than confront the ways social media organize attention, everyday life, and society. This book addresses the ambivalence, commodification, and complicity involved in attempts to separate from social media.
Abstract:
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- Defining Disconnection -- Desiring Disconnection -- Designing Disconnection -- Delaying Disconnection -- References -- Part I: Defining Disconnection -- Chapter 1: Why Disconnecting Matters: Towards a Critical Research Agenda on Online Disconnection -- Beyond the Narrative of Technology Non-use -- Beyond the Narratives of Connectivity and Participation -- What Does Online Disconnection Mean and Why People Do It? -- Disconnecting to Resist and to Reconnect -- Engaging with the Materiality and Temporality of the Digital -- Towards a Critical Research Agenda on Online Disconnection -- References -- Chapter 2: The Ontological Insecurity of Disconnecting* : A Theory of Echolocation and the Self -- Echolocation: Background of the Theory -- The Inherency of the Ping and Echo in Everyday Life -- Locating, Mapping, Positioning -- Explicating the Concept of Ontological Security -- The Disorientation of Disconnection: Ontological Insecurity -- Reverberation as a Sense of Relevance in the Social World -- References -- Part II: Desiring Disconnection -- Chapter 3: 'Hey! I'm Back after a 24h #DigitalDetox!': Influencers Posing Disconnection -- Living the Influencer Life-Performance Anxiety -- Getting Away from It All . . . -- . . . or Some of It -- In the Search of a Better Life, and Better Job -- Conclusions -- References -- Appendix -- Chapter 4: Privacy, Energy, Time, and Moments Stolen: Social Media Experiences Pushing towards Disconnection -- Literature Review: Social Media, Disconnection, and Ambivalence -- Methods: Qualitative Interviews with Media Users -- Reactions to Social Media: Positive, Negative, and Predominantly Ambivalent -- Dimensions of Social Media: Systemic, Technological, Public, and Personal Aspects.
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