Rivista e Edizione

Volume 44 (2023): Edizione 2 (June 2023)

Volume 44 (2023): Edizione 1 (January 2023)

Volume 43 (2022): Edizione 2 (June 2022)

Volume 43 (2022): Edizione 1 (January 2022)

Volume 42 (2021): Edizione s4 (September 2021)

Volume 42 (2021): Edizione s3 (April 2021)

Volume 42 (2021): Edizione 2 (July 2021)

Volume 42 (2021): Edizione s2 (March 2021)

Volume 42 (2021): Edizione s1 (March 2021)

Volume 42 (2021): Edizione 1 (January 2021)

Volume 41 (2020): Edizione 2 (June 2020)

Volume 41 (2020): Edizione 1 (January 2020)

Volume 41 (2020): Edizione s1 (September 2020)

Volume 40 (2019): Edizione s2 (October 2019)

Volume 40 (2019): Edizione 2 (March 2019)

Volume 40 (2019): Edizione 1 (February 2019)

Volume 40 (2019): Edizione s1 (June 2019)

Volume 39 (2018): Edizione 2 (December 2018)

Volume 39 (2018): Edizione 1 (May 2018)

Volume 38 (2017): Edizione s2 (November 2017)

Volume 38 (2017): Edizione 2 (November 2017)

Volume 38 (2017): Edizione 1 (June 2017)

Volume 38 (2017): Edizione s1 (June 2017)

Volume 37 (2016): Edizione 2 (November 2016)

Volume 37 (2016): Edizione s1 (August 2016)

Volume 37 (2016): Edizione 1 (June 2016)

Volume 36 (2015): Edizione 2 (October 2015)

Volume 36 (2015): Edizione 1 (June 2015)

Volume 36 (2015): Edizione s1 (May 2015)

Volume 35 (2014): Edizione 2 (December 2014)

Volume 35 (2014): Edizione s1 (August 2014)

Volume 35 (2014): Edizione 1 (June 2014)

Volume 34 (2013): Edizione 2 (November 2013)

Volume 34 (2013): Edizione 1 (July 2013)

Volume 34 (2013): Edizione s1 (December 2013)

Volume 33 (2012): Edizione Special-Edizione (December 2012)

Volume 33 (2012): Edizione 2 (December 2012)

Volume 33 (2013): Edizione 1 (March 2013)

Volume 32 (2011): Edizione 2 (November 2011)

Volume 32 (2011): Edizione 1 (June 2011)

Volume 31 (2010): Edizione 2 (November 2010)

Volume 31 (2010): Edizione 1 (June 2010)

Volume 30 (2009): Edizione 2 (November 2009)

Volume 30 (2009): Edizione 1 (June 2009)

Volume 29 (2008): Edizione 2 (November 2008)

Volume 29 (2008): Edizione 1 (April 2008)

Volume 28 (2007): Edizione 2 (November 2007)

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Volume 27 (2006): Edizione 2 (November 2006)

Volume 27 (2006): Edizione 1 (February 2006)

Volume 26 (2005): Edizione 2 (November 2005)

Volume 26 (2005): Edizione 1 (May 2005)

Volume 25 (2004): Edizione 1-2 (August 2004)

Volume 24 (2003): Edizione 2 (November 2003)

Volume 24 (2003): Edizione 1 (May 2003)

Volume 23 (2002): Edizione 1-2 (September 2002)

Volume 22 (2001): Edizione 2 (December 2001)

Volume 22 (2001): Edizione 1 (April 2001)

Volume 21 (2000): Edizione 2 (November 2000)

Volume 21 (2000): Edizione 1 (February 2000)

Dettagli della rivista
Formato
Rivista
eISSN
2001-5119
Pubblicato per la prima volta
01 Mar 2013
Periodo di pubblicazione
2 volte all'anno
Lingue
Inglese

Cerca

Volume 42 (2021): Edizione s4 (September 2021)

Dettagli della rivista
Formato
Rivista
eISSN
2001-5119
Pubblicato per la prima volta
01 Mar 2013
Periodo di pubblicazione
2 volte all'anno
Lingue
Inglese

Cerca

0 Articoli
Accesso libero

Struggling with technology: Perspectives on everyday life

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 1 - 6

Astratto

Accesso libero

Struggling with and mastering e-mail consultations: A study of access, interaction, and participation in a digital health care system

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 7 - 21

Astratto

Abstract

In Denmark, medical consultations and the institutional practice of going to the doctor have been expanded upon over the past decade, with e-mail consultations (e-consultations) now supplementing conventional consultations. As a form of communication with different constraints than face-to-face and telephonic communication, e-consultations are likely to both afford some benefits and present struggles. In this article, I examine the use and perception of primary care e-consultations from the perspective of the patient. The study is based on qualitative interviews with 20 patients and guided by the following research question: How do patients struggle with and master digital participation during e-consultations? The study demonstrates that e-consultations are more than a digital access point to the healthcare system: patients often struggle to maintain contact with their general practitioner, and e-consultations can help them navigate the healthcare system. Indeed, those who master this form of communication are appreciative of it and perceive it as screen care.

Parole chiave

  • digital consultation
  • participation
  • primary care
  • patients
  • screen care
Accesso libero

Hybrid presence: Integrating interprofessional interactions with digital consultations

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 22 - 44

Astratto

Abstract

Healthcare practitioners struggle to adapt to the changes that new digital media entail for social interactions, but what does the struggle look like, and how is it embedded in these professionals’ everyday experiences? I investigate these questions in this study of how digitalisation conditions social interactions in the context of the Danish medical setting by drawing on ethnographic work. Moreover, via a video-recorded case study, this article shows how two practitioners organise social actions by exploiting features of a digital communication system in a situation where they manage a practical problem. I propose the concept of hybrid presence related to the scientific fields of dialogism and distributed cognition as an explanation of how the participants are capable of immersing themselves with both the digital technology and the social interaction. Hybrid presence thus proves useful in the discussion of how practitioners may struggle with technology.

Parole chiave

  • hybrid presence
  • digital consultations
  • absent presence
  • dialogism
  • cognitive ethnography
Accesso libero

eHealth platforms as user–data communication: Examining patients’ struggles with digital health data

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 45 - 58

Astratto

Abstract

Sundhed.dk is Denmark's national eHealth platform allowing citizens to access their personal health data. Based on 16 qualitative interviews with patients, our aim in this article is to examine how patients engage with their health data. First, we illustrate how patients struggle in different ways to make sense of numerical measurements and written notes. Second, we examine the platform as a communicative space and suggest that a new “medical-domestic” space arises in which medical data is interpreted and negotiated at home. Third, we investigate how health data affects patients’ experiences of being involved as equal partners and how access to data potentially enhances patient empowerment, but also how expectations are sometimes unfulfilled. In conclusion, we argue for a broader public dialogue in order to make sure that the data provided actually creates an optimal starting point and does not foster insecurity or self-doubt on the patient's side.

Parole chiave

  • eHealth
  • health data
  • sense-making
  • communication
  • struggles
Accesso libero

Toddlers’ digital media practices and everyday parental struggles: Interactions and meaning-making as digital media are domesticated

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 59 - 78

Astratto

Abstract

In this article, the Swedish findings from a European comparative study on 0–3-year-old children and their digital lives are presented and discussed in relation to domestication theory, including the concept of moral economy. More specifically, attention is paid to toddler's appropriation of digital technology and the parents’ moral struggles: the negotiations between the parents concerning the introduction of digital media practices in early childhood, the selection of content, and the monitoring of children. Parents of very young children have ambivalent feelings towards digital media technologies and struggle to make the right decision for their children. The study demonstrates that the domestication of digital technology in early childhood is far more multifaceted and troublesome for parents to handle than previous research has found.

Parole chiave

  • 0–3-year-old children
  • digital media practices
  • domestication theory
  • moral economy
  • “day in the life” methodology
Accesso libero

The ambiguities of surveillance as care and control: Struggles in the domestication of location-tracking applications by Danish parents

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 79 - 93

Astratto

Abstract

The implicit ambiguity of surveillance as both care and control has been a key theoretical issue in social science research on surveillance practices and technologies. This article addresses this ambiguity empirically by examining how parents using – or not using – location-tracking apps to monitor their children negotiate this tension. Drawing on 17 semistructured interviews conducted with parents in different regions of Denmark, we examine the struggles of these parents to fit this technology into their world and to reconcile their uses with ideals of trust, privacy, and good parenting. By highlighting how users and non-users perceive and negotiate the controlling affordances of tracking apps, we emphasise the potential for negotiation, contestation, and resistance raised by this technology, and the contingent nature of its appropriation and effects. Thereby, it brings nuances to techno-pessimistic accounts of child tracking and calls for further empirical studies examining how these technologies are experienced in practice.

Parole chiave

  • surveillance
  • family
  • location tracking
  • child tracking
  • user studies
Accesso libero

Contesting digital leisure time: Parental struggles in relation to young children's play with tablets at home

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 94 - 106

Astratto

Abstract

Young children's practices with tablet computers has been a topic in parenting discourses for several years, drawing on earlier debates over technologies and media in children's lives. In this article, I analyse data from a video observation–based media ethnography of seven Danish children (aged 4–6) and engage with the research tradition attributed to parental mediation. The analysis suggests two major paths in the struggles that stand out from the discourses and in situ practices of parents and children in the empirical data. These paths encompass struggles in relation to supporting and directing children's play activities and setting boundaries in their use of tablets and content. The nuances and implications of both paths are analysed and discussed in terms of strategies that emerge to support children's agency and rapport with parents, as well as what this means for future research.

Parole chiave

  • young children
  • digital media
  • tablets
  • play
  • parental mediation
Accesso libero

The struggle and enrichment of play: Domestications and overflows in the everyday life of gamer parents

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 107 - 123

Astratto

Abstract

Gaming is a frequent source of conflict for families. Research on parents and gaming has identified a lack of gaming-related expertise, a general devaluation or fear of play, and authoritative and restrictive parenting styles as key sources of conflict. What happens when these deficits are addressed? What does mediation look like when parents are expert gamers, enjoy play, and encourage play for their children? Based on qualitative interviews with 29 parents who identify as gamers, we explore how gamer parents domesticate games. To explore the work of stabilising gaming as a wholesome and valued pastime, we combine domestication theory with overflows to address the struggles involved. The analysis investigates how gamer parents mediate play, with an emphasis on how games are interpreted, the family's player practices, and the role of gaming-related expertise in accordance with the three dimensions (symbolic, practice, cognitive) of domestication theory.

Parole chiave

  • digital games
  • parental mediation
  • overflows
  • domestication
  • everyday life
Accesso libero

The ambiguity of technology in ASMR experiences: Four types of intimacies and struggles in the user comments on YouTube

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 124 - 136

Astratto

Abstract

Autonomous sensory meridian response (ASMR) is a tingling, static-like sensation in response to specific triggering audio and visual stimuli. Within recent years, ASMR has mostly been associated with videos on YouTube (technologically mediated ASMR) dedicated to make the users “tingle”, relax, and feel at ease. In this article, I explore the ambiguity of technology in relation to the ASMR experience and theoretically investigate how viewer-listeners might struggle to obtain an intimate and parasocial interaction in a technologically mediated ASMR context. The article introduces four types of intimacies as well as theoretical concepts of mediated intimacy, immediacy, and parasocial interaction, and I discuss these intimacies and concepts in relation to illustrative comments by some of the pacesetting power users of ASMR.

Parole chiave

  • ASMR
  • YouTube
  • mediated intimacy
  • immediacy
  • parasocial interaction
Accesso libero

Move, eat, sleep, repeat: Living by rhythm with proactive self-tracking technologies

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 137 - 151

Astratto

Abstract

Proactive self-tracking is a proliferating digital media practice that involves gathering data about the body and the self outside a clinical healthcare setting. Various studies have noted that self-tracking technologies affect people's everyday modes of thought and action and stick to their lifeworlds because these technologies seek to promote “improved” modes of behaviour. We investigate how the specific devices and interfaces involved in self-tracking attract and prescribe rhythmicity into everyday lives and elaborate on how human bodies and technical systems of self-tracking interact rhythmically. We draw from new materialist ontology, combining it with Henri Lefebvre's method of rhythmanalysis and his notion of dressage. We employ a collaborative autoethnographical approach and engage with both of our personal fieldwork experiences in living with self-tracking devices. We argue that rhythmicity and dressage are fruitful analytical tools to use in understanding human–technology attachments as well as a variety of everyday struggles inherent in self-tracking practices.

Parole chiave

  • self-tracking
  • digital media
  • rhythmanalysis
  • collaborative autoethnography
  • dressage
Accesso libero

Going cold turkey!: An autoethnographic exploration of digital disengagement

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 152 - 167

Astratto

Abstract

As the dust of society-wide digitalisation settles, the search for meaningful technological encounters is becoming more urgent. While the Nordic countries embrace digitalisation, recent concerns regarding technology overuse have been gaining increased attention. This tendency is exemplified in practices of limiting digital use, called digital disengagement – an apparent paradox in Nordic societies where digital is the dominant paradigm. In this article, we explore the emergence of disconnection-centred devices called “dumbphones”, which cater to individuals wishing to escape hyperconnected lifestyles. Drawing on a new materialist perspective, we present a content analysis of dumbphones’ advertising material, followed by a collaborative autoethnographic study in which we replace our smartphones with dumbphones. We critically weigh the promises of the dumbphones against the actual experience of digital disengagement in Sweden. Our findings illustrate a struggle with digital technologies, even despite their absence, due to emerging workarounds and societal expectations of use.

Parole chiave

  • digital disengagement
  • digital detox
  • dumbphone
  • autoethnography
  • new materialism
Accesso libero

Existential vulnerability and transition: Struggling with involuntary childlessness on Instagram

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 168 - 184

Astratto

Abstract

In their efforts to find others who share their experiential reality and existential struggle, many involuntarily childless women turn to Instagram to engage and participate in the practice of trying-to-conceive (TTC) communication. Through the conceptual lens of digital existence, where the digital and online are regarded as constitutive of existential transition, we draw on ten interviews and an online ethnography to explore some of the struggles that involuntarily childless women experience with and through technology. We find that TTC communication can be constitutive of coming to terms with the status of involuntary childlessness. In particular, this study illustrates that TTC communication, for involuntarily childless women, is both a site of struggle and a safe space as they transition to nonmotherhood in an existential terrain where they share an intimate journey.

Parole chiave

  • existential media studies
  • involuntary childlessness
  • vulnerability
  • transition
  • Instagram
Accesso libero

An organisational cultivation of digital resignation?: Enterprise social media, privacy, and autonomy

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 185 - 198

Astratto

Abstract

Enterprise social media (ESM) have largely gone ignored in discussions of the datafication practices of social media platforms. This article presents an initial step towards filling this research gap. My research question in this article regards how employees of companies using the ESM Workplace from Facebook feel that the implementation of this particular platform relates to their potential struggles for digital privacy and work–life segmentation. Methodologically, I explore this through a qualitative interview study of 21 Danish knowledge workers in different organisations using the ESM. The central analytical proposal of the article is that the interviewees express a “digital resignation” towards the implementation of the ESM. In contrast to previous discussions, this resignation cannot only be thought of as “corporately cultivated” by third parties, but must also be considered as “organisationally cultivated” by the organisations people work for. The study suggests that datafication-oriented media studies should consider organisational contexts.

Parole chiave

  • datafication
  • enterprise social media
  • privacy paradox
  • autonomy paradox
  • Workplace from Facebook
0 Articoli
Accesso libero

Struggling with technology: Perspectives on everyday life

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 1 - 6

Astratto

Accesso libero

Struggling with and mastering e-mail consultations: A study of access, interaction, and participation in a digital health care system

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 7 - 21

Astratto

Abstract

In Denmark, medical consultations and the institutional practice of going to the doctor have been expanded upon over the past decade, with e-mail consultations (e-consultations) now supplementing conventional consultations. As a form of communication with different constraints than face-to-face and telephonic communication, e-consultations are likely to both afford some benefits and present struggles. In this article, I examine the use and perception of primary care e-consultations from the perspective of the patient. The study is based on qualitative interviews with 20 patients and guided by the following research question: How do patients struggle with and master digital participation during e-consultations? The study demonstrates that e-consultations are more than a digital access point to the healthcare system: patients often struggle to maintain contact with their general practitioner, and e-consultations can help them navigate the healthcare system. Indeed, those who master this form of communication are appreciative of it and perceive it as screen care.

Parole chiave

  • digital consultation
  • participation
  • primary care
  • patients
  • screen care
Accesso libero

Hybrid presence: Integrating interprofessional interactions with digital consultations

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 22 - 44

Astratto

Abstract

Healthcare practitioners struggle to adapt to the changes that new digital media entail for social interactions, but what does the struggle look like, and how is it embedded in these professionals’ everyday experiences? I investigate these questions in this study of how digitalisation conditions social interactions in the context of the Danish medical setting by drawing on ethnographic work. Moreover, via a video-recorded case study, this article shows how two practitioners organise social actions by exploiting features of a digital communication system in a situation where they manage a practical problem. I propose the concept of hybrid presence related to the scientific fields of dialogism and distributed cognition as an explanation of how the participants are capable of immersing themselves with both the digital technology and the social interaction. Hybrid presence thus proves useful in the discussion of how practitioners may struggle with technology.

Parole chiave

  • hybrid presence
  • digital consultations
  • absent presence
  • dialogism
  • cognitive ethnography
Accesso libero

eHealth platforms as user–data communication: Examining patients’ struggles with digital health data

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 45 - 58

Astratto

Abstract

Sundhed.dk is Denmark's national eHealth platform allowing citizens to access their personal health data. Based on 16 qualitative interviews with patients, our aim in this article is to examine how patients engage with their health data. First, we illustrate how patients struggle in different ways to make sense of numerical measurements and written notes. Second, we examine the platform as a communicative space and suggest that a new “medical-domestic” space arises in which medical data is interpreted and negotiated at home. Third, we investigate how health data affects patients’ experiences of being involved as equal partners and how access to data potentially enhances patient empowerment, but also how expectations are sometimes unfulfilled. In conclusion, we argue for a broader public dialogue in order to make sure that the data provided actually creates an optimal starting point and does not foster insecurity or self-doubt on the patient's side.

Parole chiave

  • eHealth
  • health data
  • sense-making
  • communication
  • struggles
Accesso libero

Toddlers’ digital media practices and everyday parental struggles: Interactions and meaning-making as digital media are domesticated

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 59 - 78

Astratto

Abstract

In this article, the Swedish findings from a European comparative study on 0–3-year-old children and their digital lives are presented and discussed in relation to domestication theory, including the concept of moral economy. More specifically, attention is paid to toddler's appropriation of digital technology and the parents’ moral struggles: the negotiations between the parents concerning the introduction of digital media practices in early childhood, the selection of content, and the monitoring of children. Parents of very young children have ambivalent feelings towards digital media technologies and struggle to make the right decision for their children. The study demonstrates that the domestication of digital technology in early childhood is far more multifaceted and troublesome for parents to handle than previous research has found.

Parole chiave

  • 0–3-year-old children
  • digital media practices
  • domestication theory
  • moral economy
  • “day in the life” methodology
Accesso libero

The ambiguities of surveillance as care and control: Struggles in the domestication of location-tracking applications by Danish parents

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 79 - 93

Astratto

Abstract

The implicit ambiguity of surveillance as both care and control has been a key theoretical issue in social science research on surveillance practices and technologies. This article addresses this ambiguity empirically by examining how parents using – or not using – location-tracking apps to monitor their children negotiate this tension. Drawing on 17 semistructured interviews conducted with parents in different regions of Denmark, we examine the struggles of these parents to fit this technology into their world and to reconcile their uses with ideals of trust, privacy, and good parenting. By highlighting how users and non-users perceive and negotiate the controlling affordances of tracking apps, we emphasise the potential for negotiation, contestation, and resistance raised by this technology, and the contingent nature of its appropriation and effects. Thereby, it brings nuances to techno-pessimistic accounts of child tracking and calls for further empirical studies examining how these technologies are experienced in practice.

Parole chiave

  • surveillance
  • family
  • location tracking
  • child tracking
  • user studies
Accesso libero

Contesting digital leisure time: Parental struggles in relation to young children's play with tablets at home

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 94 - 106

Astratto

Abstract

Young children's practices with tablet computers has been a topic in parenting discourses for several years, drawing on earlier debates over technologies and media in children's lives. In this article, I analyse data from a video observation–based media ethnography of seven Danish children (aged 4–6) and engage with the research tradition attributed to parental mediation. The analysis suggests two major paths in the struggles that stand out from the discourses and in situ practices of parents and children in the empirical data. These paths encompass struggles in relation to supporting and directing children's play activities and setting boundaries in their use of tablets and content. The nuances and implications of both paths are analysed and discussed in terms of strategies that emerge to support children's agency and rapport with parents, as well as what this means for future research.

Parole chiave

  • young children
  • digital media
  • tablets
  • play
  • parental mediation
Accesso libero

The struggle and enrichment of play: Domestications and overflows in the everyday life of gamer parents

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 107 - 123

Astratto

Abstract

Gaming is a frequent source of conflict for families. Research on parents and gaming has identified a lack of gaming-related expertise, a general devaluation or fear of play, and authoritative and restrictive parenting styles as key sources of conflict. What happens when these deficits are addressed? What does mediation look like when parents are expert gamers, enjoy play, and encourage play for their children? Based on qualitative interviews with 29 parents who identify as gamers, we explore how gamer parents domesticate games. To explore the work of stabilising gaming as a wholesome and valued pastime, we combine domestication theory with overflows to address the struggles involved. The analysis investigates how gamer parents mediate play, with an emphasis on how games are interpreted, the family's player practices, and the role of gaming-related expertise in accordance with the three dimensions (symbolic, practice, cognitive) of domestication theory.

Parole chiave

  • digital games
  • parental mediation
  • overflows
  • domestication
  • everyday life
Accesso libero

The ambiguity of technology in ASMR experiences: Four types of intimacies and struggles in the user comments on YouTube

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 124 - 136

Astratto

Abstract

Autonomous sensory meridian response (ASMR) is a tingling, static-like sensation in response to specific triggering audio and visual stimuli. Within recent years, ASMR has mostly been associated with videos on YouTube (technologically mediated ASMR) dedicated to make the users “tingle”, relax, and feel at ease. In this article, I explore the ambiguity of technology in relation to the ASMR experience and theoretically investigate how viewer-listeners might struggle to obtain an intimate and parasocial interaction in a technologically mediated ASMR context. The article introduces four types of intimacies as well as theoretical concepts of mediated intimacy, immediacy, and parasocial interaction, and I discuss these intimacies and concepts in relation to illustrative comments by some of the pacesetting power users of ASMR.

Parole chiave

  • ASMR
  • YouTube
  • mediated intimacy
  • immediacy
  • parasocial interaction
Accesso libero

Move, eat, sleep, repeat: Living by rhythm with proactive self-tracking technologies

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 137 - 151

Astratto

Abstract

Proactive self-tracking is a proliferating digital media practice that involves gathering data about the body and the self outside a clinical healthcare setting. Various studies have noted that self-tracking technologies affect people's everyday modes of thought and action and stick to their lifeworlds because these technologies seek to promote “improved” modes of behaviour. We investigate how the specific devices and interfaces involved in self-tracking attract and prescribe rhythmicity into everyday lives and elaborate on how human bodies and technical systems of self-tracking interact rhythmically. We draw from new materialist ontology, combining it with Henri Lefebvre's method of rhythmanalysis and his notion of dressage. We employ a collaborative autoethnographical approach and engage with both of our personal fieldwork experiences in living with self-tracking devices. We argue that rhythmicity and dressage are fruitful analytical tools to use in understanding human–technology attachments as well as a variety of everyday struggles inherent in self-tracking practices.

Parole chiave

  • self-tracking
  • digital media
  • rhythmanalysis
  • collaborative autoethnography
  • dressage
Accesso libero

Going cold turkey!: An autoethnographic exploration of digital disengagement

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 152 - 167

Astratto

Abstract

As the dust of society-wide digitalisation settles, the search for meaningful technological encounters is becoming more urgent. While the Nordic countries embrace digitalisation, recent concerns regarding technology overuse have been gaining increased attention. This tendency is exemplified in practices of limiting digital use, called digital disengagement – an apparent paradox in Nordic societies where digital is the dominant paradigm. In this article, we explore the emergence of disconnection-centred devices called “dumbphones”, which cater to individuals wishing to escape hyperconnected lifestyles. Drawing on a new materialist perspective, we present a content analysis of dumbphones’ advertising material, followed by a collaborative autoethnographic study in which we replace our smartphones with dumbphones. We critically weigh the promises of the dumbphones against the actual experience of digital disengagement in Sweden. Our findings illustrate a struggle with digital technologies, even despite their absence, due to emerging workarounds and societal expectations of use.

Parole chiave

  • digital disengagement
  • digital detox
  • dumbphone
  • autoethnography
  • new materialism
Accesso libero

Existential vulnerability and transition: Struggling with involuntary childlessness on Instagram

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 168 - 184

Astratto

Abstract

In their efforts to find others who share their experiential reality and existential struggle, many involuntarily childless women turn to Instagram to engage and participate in the practice of trying-to-conceive (TTC) communication. Through the conceptual lens of digital existence, where the digital and online are regarded as constitutive of existential transition, we draw on ten interviews and an online ethnography to explore some of the struggles that involuntarily childless women experience with and through technology. We find that TTC communication can be constitutive of coming to terms with the status of involuntary childlessness. In particular, this study illustrates that TTC communication, for involuntarily childless women, is both a site of struggle and a safe space as they transition to nonmotherhood in an existential terrain where they share an intimate journey.

Parole chiave

  • existential media studies
  • involuntary childlessness
  • vulnerability
  • transition
  • Instagram
Accesso libero

An organisational cultivation of digital resignation?: Enterprise social media, privacy, and autonomy

Pubblicato online: 09 Sep 2021
Pagine: 185 - 198

Astratto

Abstract

Enterprise social media (ESM) have largely gone ignored in discussions of the datafication practices of social media platforms. This article presents an initial step towards filling this research gap. My research question in this article regards how employees of companies using the ESM Workplace from Facebook feel that the implementation of this particular platform relates to their potential struggles for digital privacy and work–life segmentation. Methodologically, I explore this through a qualitative interview study of 21 Danish knowledge workers in different organisations using the ESM. The central analytical proposal of the article is that the interviewees express a “digital resignation” towards the implementation of the ESM. In contrast to previous discussions, this resignation cannot only be thought of as “corporately cultivated” by third parties, but must also be considered as “organisationally cultivated” by the organisations people work for. The study suggests that datafication-oriented media studies should consider organisational contexts.

Parole chiave

  • datafication
  • enterprise social media
  • privacy paradox
  • autonomy paradox
  • Workplace from Facebook