Abstract: This paper uses a psychoanalytic lens to consider the impact of new and social media (SNS) on relationships, intimacy and romantic love. It considers the unconscious factors that underlie our burgeoning and sometimes rather desperate attachments to modern, mobile technologies. Although Freud tended to see romance as a sign of infantile and regressed behavior, more contemporary analysts and psychotherapists question this view seeing romance as an important element of mature relationships and a vital aspect of psychosocial development. While the growth of social and new media can be simplistically demonized, the writer suggests these developments are an important reflection of Hopper’s social unconscious with its emphasis on culture...
This book examines the use of modern technologies in clinical psychological practice. It considers h...
With the latest data informing us that 78% of UK adults now own a smartphone and that most young peo...
Whilst research considers the role played by social media in romantic relationships (Van Ouytsel et ...
Today, millions of people are starting, maintaining, and ending relationships through communication ...
This chapter maps the field of psychosocial / psychoanalytic digital media studies. It begins with a...
We live in a world dominated by technology. In this environment, how have relationships and love bee...
Our lives are saturated by media that we use in conscious as well as unconscious ways. Spanning a wi...
Although there is a high level of concern about the effects of the near constant use of digital medi...
With the prevalence of dating apps, online networking and a new generation who prefers spending time...
This thesis seeks to understand how social media, through computer-mediated communication (CMC), imp...
Digital technologies are deeply embedded in everyday life with opportunities for information access ...
How we listen to the potential space of online relations is rapidly becom-ing part of our daily work...
Romantic, dyadic relationships arise, in part, from communication, disclosure, and boundaries. Infor...
Clinical work with adolescents and young people over the last decade has indicated that an intense r...
Psychoanalysis and Digital Culture offers a comprehensive account of our contemporary media environm...
This book examines the use of modern technologies in clinical psychological practice. It considers h...
With the latest data informing us that 78% of UK adults now own a smartphone and that most young peo...
Whilst research considers the role played by social media in romantic relationships (Van Ouytsel et ...
Today, millions of people are starting, maintaining, and ending relationships through communication ...
This chapter maps the field of psychosocial / psychoanalytic digital media studies. It begins with a...
We live in a world dominated by technology. In this environment, how have relationships and love bee...
Our lives are saturated by media that we use in conscious as well as unconscious ways. Spanning a wi...
Although there is a high level of concern about the effects of the near constant use of digital medi...
With the prevalence of dating apps, online networking and a new generation who prefers spending time...
This thesis seeks to understand how social media, through computer-mediated communication (CMC), imp...
Digital technologies are deeply embedded in everyday life with opportunities for information access ...
How we listen to the potential space of online relations is rapidly becom-ing part of our daily work...
Romantic, dyadic relationships arise, in part, from communication, disclosure, and boundaries. Infor...
Clinical work with adolescents and young people over the last decade has indicated that an intense r...
Psychoanalysis and Digital Culture offers a comprehensive account of our contemporary media environm...
This book examines the use of modern technologies in clinical psychological practice. It considers h...
With the latest data informing us that 78% of UK adults now own a smartphone and that most young peo...
Whilst research considers the role played by social media in romantic relationships (Van Ouytsel et ...