Programme financé par l'ANR Sociétés innovantes Edition 2013, Février 2014-Février 2018.International audienceThis paper proposes to study the fact that a deceased person continues, after life, to have a “digital afterlife”. It shows how post-mortem digital presence contributes to re-introducing death into the social sphere, thus blurring the lines between mourning rituals and everyday rituals that rely on digital technology. Outlining a typology of how memorial websites are used, it shows that, in our hyper-connected Western society, the question of using post-mortem digital data concerns everyone, since it is now difficult to avoid having some kind of presence on the Web. Whereas some bereaved prefer to erase traces of the departed, other...
In this paper, I investigate digital device users and their relationships with devices in order to t...
It is often claimed that modern media massively return the repressed yet unavoidable fact of death, ...
It is often claimed that modern media massively return the repressed yet unavoidable fact of death, ...
The first ‘Digital Death Day,’ held on 20 May 2010, brought together world experts in the fields of ...
From the beginning of known human history people have devised ways of providing enduring links betw...
International audienceAs a privileged site for individual identity building, the Web and its uses ha...
Since their nascence communication technologies have been associated with death, triggering fantasie...
Bereavement practices with the material legacies of the dead are known to be deeply complex, multifa...
The dead are increasingly present on the web. Within the next three decades alone, an estimated 2.2 ...
For the past two decades, as in so many other fields of our social lives, digital media has permeate...
Despite the range of studies into grief and mourning in relation to the digital, research to date la...
As a work in progress, this paper will demonstrate the disturbing ambiguity concerning what happens ...
We live in the information age, and our lives are increasingly digitized. Our quotidian has been tra...
This article examines memorialization among the family and friends of those who have died at the wor...
We live in the information age, and our lives are increasingly digitized. Our quotidian has been tra...
In this paper, I investigate digital device users and their relationships with devices in order to t...
It is often claimed that modern media massively return the repressed yet unavoidable fact of death, ...
It is often claimed that modern media massively return the repressed yet unavoidable fact of death, ...
The first ‘Digital Death Day,’ held on 20 May 2010, brought together world experts in the fields of ...
From the beginning of known human history people have devised ways of providing enduring links betw...
International audienceAs a privileged site for individual identity building, the Web and its uses ha...
Since their nascence communication technologies have been associated with death, triggering fantasie...
Bereavement practices with the material legacies of the dead are known to be deeply complex, multifa...
The dead are increasingly present on the web. Within the next three decades alone, an estimated 2.2 ...
For the past two decades, as in so many other fields of our social lives, digital media has permeate...
Despite the range of studies into grief and mourning in relation to the digital, research to date la...
As a work in progress, this paper will demonstrate the disturbing ambiguity concerning what happens ...
We live in the information age, and our lives are increasingly digitized. Our quotidian has been tra...
This article examines memorialization among the family and friends of those who have died at the wor...
We live in the information age, and our lives are increasingly digitized. Our quotidian has been tra...
In this paper, I investigate digital device users and their relationships with devices in order to t...
It is often claimed that modern media massively return the repressed yet unavoidable fact of death, ...
It is often claimed that modern media massively return the repressed yet unavoidable fact of death, ...