This paper considers how parents use the social media platform Instagram to facilitate the capture, curation and sharing of ‘family snapshots’. Our work draws upon established cross-disciplinary literature relating to film photography and the composition of family albums in order to establish whether social media has changed the way parents visually present their families. We conducted a qualitative visual analysis of a sample of 4,000 photographs collected from Instagram using hashtags relating to children and parenting. We show that the style and composition of snapshots featuring children remains fundamentally unchanged and continues to be dominated by rather bland and idealised images of the happy family and the cute child. In addition,...
Photography has long been of importance for humans in aspects of community, sharing and documenting....
This paper investigates photo sharing practices on mobile social media platforms among Danish youth ...
The study draws on the privacy paradox to explore to what extent selected British social media influ...
This thesis addresses parental identity and the family snapshot in the age of social media, through ...
This article examines how practices of family photography are being transformed in the digital spher...
This article invites us to reflect on oversharenting and family life that, owing to the proliferatio...
With the wellbeing of children being at the center of contemporary media discourse (Livingstone & Bo...
While social media is communal by definition, the use, regulation and understanding of social media ...
This article discusses how visuality, through the mobility of Instagram, modifies individuals’ medi...
Among the many concerns of social media, “sharenting,” or parents oversharing about their children o...
This article discusses how visuality, through the mobility of Instagram, modifies individuals’ media...
This study aims to investigate how parents are reasoning when it comes to sharing photos of their ch...
The sharenting practice, or the sharing of one’s parenting and children online, has become a popular...
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine mothers’ social media accounts that focus on childr...
I denna uppsats har vi valt att fördjupa oss i hur föräldrar resonerar kring användningen av Instagr...
Photography has long been of importance for humans in aspects of community, sharing and documenting....
This paper investigates photo sharing practices on mobile social media platforms among Danish youth ...
The study draws on the privacy paradox to explore to what extent selected British social media influ...
This thesis addresses parental identity and the family snapshot in the age of social media, through ...
This article examines how practices of family photography are being transformed in the digital spher...
This article invites us to reflect on oversharenting and family life that, owing to the proliferatio...
With the wellbeing of children being at the center of contemporary media discourse (Livingstone & Bo...
While social media is communal by definition, the use, regulation and understanding of social media ...
This article discusses how visuality, through the mobility of Instagram, modifies individuals’ medi...
Among the many concerns of social media, “sharenting,” or parents oversharing about their children o...
This article discusses how visuality, through the mobility of Instagram, modifies individuals’ media...
This study aims to investigate how parents are reasoning when it comes to sharing photos of their ch...
The sharenting practice, or the sharing of one’s parenting and children online, has become a popular...
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine mothers’ social media accounts that focus on childr...
I denna uppsats har vi valt att fördjupa oss i hur föräldrar resonerar kring användningen av Instagr...
Photography has long been of importance for humans in aspects of community, sharing and documenting....
This paper investigates photo sharing practices on mobile social media platforms among Danish youth ...
The study draws on the privacy paradox to explore to what extent selected British social media influ...