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Five Oversharing in the time of selfies: an aesthetics of disappearance?

  • Amanda du Preez
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Connecting Families?
This chapter is in the book Connecting Families?

Abstract

This chapter examines the affordances of information and communication technologies (ICTs) and the different intergenerational practices of oversharing online. Using the concepts of ‘aesthetics of appearance’ (representation that endures over time and space) and ‘aesthetics of disappearance’ (constant presentism), it asks what prompts oversharing, what oversharing reveals about our life stages and the state of being human in an age of over-acceleration dominated by ICTs, and how oversharing affects our embodied phenomenology. The chapter first provides an overview of ideas about acceleration and the resulting aesthetics of disappearance, as proposed by philosopher and urbanist Paul Virilio, before discussing how the phenomenon of oversharing is mediated by social media platforms such as Facebook and Snapchat. It then considers whether posting selfies on a Facebook page constitutes oversharing and whether oversharing (real-time presence) achieves what Virilio calls an aesthetics of disappearance. Finally, it explores how oversharing impacts social interactions and intergenerational relationships.

Abstract

This chapter examines the affordances of information and communication technologies (ICTs) and the different intergenerational practices of oversharing online. Using the concepts of ‘aesthetics of appearance’ (representation that endures over time and space) and ‘aesthetics of disappearance’ (constant presentism), it asks what prompts oversharing, what oversharing reveals about our life stages and the state of being human in an age of over-acceleration dominated by ICTs, and how oversharing affects our embodied phenomenology. The chapter first provides an overview of ideas about acceleration and the resulting aesthetics of disappearance, as proposed by philosopher and urbanist Paul Virilio, before discussing how the phenomenon of oversharing is mediated by social media platforms such as Facebook and Snapchat. It then considers whether posting selfies on a Facebook page constitutes oversharing and whether oversharing (real-time presence) achieves what Virilio calls an aesthetics of disappearance. Finally, it explores how oversharing impacts social interactions and intergenerational relationships.

Chapters in this book

  1. Front Matter i
  2. Contents iii
  3. List of figures and tables v
  4. Notes on contributors vi
  5. Acknowledgements xiv
  6. The family has become a network xv
  7. Connecting families? An introduction 1
  8. Theoretical and methodological approaches
  9. Theoretical perspectives on technology and society: implications for understanding the relationship between ICTs and family life 21
  10. Recursive approaches to technology adoption, families, and the life course: actor network theory and strong structuration theory 41
  11. Weaving family connections on and offline: the turn to networked individualism 59
  12. Oversharing in the time of selfies: an aesthetics of disappearance? 81
  13. The application of digital methods in a life course approach to family studies 97
  14. Cross-disciplinary research methods to study technology use, family, and life course dynamics: lessons from an action research project on social isolation and loneliness in later life 113
  15. From object to instrument: technologies as tools for family relations and family research 133
  16. Empirical approaches
  17. Use of communication technology to maintain intergenerational contact: toward an understanding of ‘digital solidarity’ 159
  18. Careful families and care as ‘kinwork’: an intergenerational study of families and digital media use in Melbourne, Australia 181
  19. Floating narratives: transnational families and digital storytelling 201
  20. Rescue chains and care talk among immigrants and their left-behind parents 219
  21. ‘Wherever you go, wherever you are, I am with you ... connected with my mobile’: the use of mobile text messages for the maintenance of family and romantic relations 237
  22. Permeability of work-family borders: effects of information and communication technologies on work-family conflict at the childcare stage in Japan 255
  23. Digital connections and family practices 273
  24. Index 295
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