Korina Giaxoglou: Let’s talk about digital death, an area we have both been interested in for some time now. To start with, what is digital death? Oreet Ashery: Digital death for me is how death, dying, and mourning are experienced through digital technologies, such as online social media or digital wills
This article discusses public (and semi-public) reactions to death events attracting media and socia...
Between 2012 and 2017, a contributor to Mumsnet, a popular parenting forum online, began recording a...
The first ‘Digital Death Day,’ held on 20 May 2010, brought together world experts in the fields of ...
Nothing seems as certain as death. However, what if life continues digitally after death? Companies ...
Despite the range of studies into grief and mourning in relation to the digital, research to date la...
This special issue entitled “Futures of Digital Death: Mobilities of Loss and Commemoration“ explore...
© 2015 Taylor & Francis. This article identifies and outlines some of the more prominent ways that d...
Almost ubiquitous hardware technology, such as smart phones, ensures that social networking sites ar...
For the past two decades, as in so many other fields of our social lives, digital media has permeate...
In the following panel, we add to scholarly challenges regarding the binary distinction between life...
This thesis considers how digital communication mediates mortality in contemporary western societies...
During the past years, online services like LivesOn, Eterni.me and DeadSocial received some media co...
In a digital society, shall we be the authors of our own experience, not only during our lifetime bu...
The concept of digital immortality has emerged over the past decade and is defined here as the conti...
Our relationship to death is changing. The prevalence of death and dying online has created new ways...
This article discusses public (and semi-public) reactions to death events attracting media and socia...
Between 2012 and 2017, a contributor to Mumsnet, a popular parenting forum online, began recording a...
The first ‘Digital Death Day,’ held on 20 May 2010, brought together world experts in the fields of ...
Nothing seems as certain as death. However, what if life continues digitally after death? Companies ...
Despite the range of studies into grief and mourning in relation to the digital, research to date la...
This special issue entitled “Futures of Digital Death: Mobilities of Loss and Commemoration“ explore...
© 2015 Taylor & Francis. This article identifies and outlines some of the more prominent ways that d...
Almost ubiquitous hardware technology, such as smart phones, ensures that social networking sites ar...
For the past two decades, as in so many other fields of our social lives, digital media has permeate...
In the following panel, we add to scholarly challenges regarding the binary distinction between life...
This thesis considers how digital communication mediates mortality in contemporary western societies...
During the past years, online services like LivesOn, Eterni.me and DeadSocial received some media co...
In a digital society, shall we be the authors of our own experience, not only during our lifetime bu...
The concept of digital immortality has emerged over the past decade and is defined here as the conti...
Our relationship to death is changing. The prevalence of death and dying online has created new ways...
This article discusses public (and semi-public) reactions to death events attracting media and socia...
Between 2012 and 2017, a contributor to Mumsnet, a popular parenting forum online, began recording a...
The first ‘Digital Death Day,’ held on 20 May 2010, brought together world experts in the fields of ...