In an age of social and digital media, users’ engagements with (social) media related to death, dying and mourning vary widely across different social and cultural contexts and changing platforms. Based on the discussion of selected examples, I illustrate how users’ social media engagements related to death, dying and mourning vary, depending on the narrative positions that sharers take up as tellers, co-tellers or witnesses to shared stories. As I will argue, the potential and limits of such engagements can be better understood in the context of three over-arching, dynamic modes of practices of hyper-mourning, namely entrepreneurial, connective and activist. These are associated with distinct types of affective positions for sharers, audie...
This article provides the theoretical background for this Special Issue which explores the mediatiza...
The mediated closeness experienced by social media users is built on the ongoing accumulation of per...
Studies on death and digital media all agree that social media have changed how we mourn. However, t...
In an age of social and digital media, users’ engagements with (social) media related to death, dyin...
This book investigates how social media are reconfiguring dying, death, and mourning. Taking a narra...
This article presents findings from an empirical study of sharing practices on a Facebook memorial s...
Web 2.0 mourning is said to afford increased opportunities for the deceased's and mourners' visibili...
This article provides the theoretical background for this Special Issue which explores the mediatiza...
Wagner A. Do not Click “Like” When Somebody has Died: The Role of Norms for Mourning Practices in So...
Digital media offer new domains for people to articulate aspects of their everyday self and share re...
The growing body of research into practices of loss online (Willerslev & Christensen, 2013; Christen...
This article focuses on the role of circulated affect in crowdfunded funeral campaigns, which have a...
This paper explores a group of Dane’s motives for and experiences with using their personal Facebook...
This article discusses public (and semi-public) reactions to death events attracting media and socia...
Online identities survive the deaths of those they represent, leav-ing friends and families to strug...
This article provides the theoretical background for this Special Issue which explores the mediatiza...
The mediated closeness experienced by social media users is built on the ongoing accumulation of per...
Studies on death and digital media all agree that social media have changed how we mourn. However, t...
In an age of social and digital media, users’ engagements with (social) media related to death, dyin...
This book investigates how social media are reconfiguring dying, death, and mourning. Taking a narra...
This article presents findings from an empirical study of sharing practices on a Facebook memorial s...
Web 2.0 mourning is said to afford increased opportunities for the deceased's and mourners' visibili...
This article provides the theoretical background for this Special Issue which explores the mediatiza...
Wagner A. Do not Click “Like” When Somebody has Died: The Role of Norms for Mourning Practices in So...
Digital media offer new domains for people to articulate aspects of their everyday self and share re...
The growing body of research into practices of loss online (Willerslev & Christensen, 2013; Christen...
This article focuses on the role of circulated affect in crowdfunded funeral campaigns, which have a...
This paper explores a group of Dane’s motives for and experiences with using their personal Facebook...
This article discusses public (and semi-public) reactions to death events attracting media and socia...
Online identities survive the deaths of those they represent, leav-ing friends and families to strug...
This article provides the theoretical background for this Special Issue which explores the mediatiza...
The mediated closeness experienced by social media users is built on the ongoing accumulation of per...
Studies on death and digital media all agree that social media have changed how we mourn. However, t...