• Media type: E-Book; Still Image
  • Title: Disentangling : the geographies of digital disconnection
  • Contributor: Jansson, André [HerausgeberIn]; Adams, Paul C. [HerausgeberIn]
  • imprint: New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2021
  • Published in: Oxford scholarship online
  • Extent: 1 online resource (344 pages); illustrations (black and white, and colour)
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780197571873.001.0001
  • ISBN: 9780197571910
  • Identifier:
  • Keywords: Neue Medien > Soziales Netzwerk > Kommunikation > Interaktion
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: Also issued in print: 2021. - Includes bibliographical references and index. - Description based on online resource; title from home page (viewed on June 21, 2021)
  • Description: Blending philosophy and sociology with media geography, 'Disentangling' offers a crucial reflection on how we might unravel our digital dependence by reasserting resilient boundaries between ourselves and the surrounding political, economic, cultural, and technological systems.

    "After the rapid rise of digital networking in the 2000s and 2010s, we are now seeing a rise of interest in how people can disentangle their lives from the increasingly pervasive networks of digital communications. This edited volume contributes to the turn toward digital disconnection research by bringing together an interdisciplinary group of authors with expertise in various forms and philosophies of disentangling. By "disentangling" we mean disconnection not just from media but from a digitalized world, a world in which places and landscapes are increasingly structured around digital connectivity. People increasingly look for strategies that will let them reject, avoid, and rework pervasive media demanding they remain connected at all times. How might we facilitate autonomy from tendrils of digital surveillance, revalue places over dematerialized flows, and unravel digital dependency? Who gets to disconnect and who does not? How do natural cycles such as sleep and death relate to disentangling? Can we clarify the means and objectives of "digital detox"? Can we map the failures, glitches, contradictions and paradoxes that plague digital connectivity? What does our willing and unwilling entanglement in digital networks say with regard to social resilience and cultural resistance? The book's three sections start with questions about ethics and justice associated with the power geometries of digital (dis)connection, it then moves on to consider digitally entangled lives and afterlives, and concludes with a look at the ambiguities of (dis)connection in time-spaces of the COVID-19 pandemic"--