This essay revisits the notion of diaspora in connection with recent advancements in communication technologies, which have led to the formation of ‘digital diasporas’. The focus is on digital migrants as ‘connected users’, and therefore as participants in social media platforms. Though there is no consensus on what digital diaspora means exactly because it depends on its many disciplinary takes and media-specific variations, such as ‘e-diasporas’, ‘digital diasporas’, ‘net-diasporas’ and ‘web-diasporas’, there is consensus on the profound ways in which digital connectivity has transformed privileged terms of spatiality, belonging and self-identification. Digital diasporas provide new possible cartographies to map the self in relation to in...