Drawing on a wide corpus of ethnographic research projects, including on photography practices, young filmmakers and writers, and current research with young unemployed people, we argue that contemporary understandings of selfies either in relation to a “documenting of the self” or as a neoliberal (narcissistic) identity affirmation are inherently problematic. Instead, we argue that selfies should be understood as a wider social, cultural, and media phenomenon that understands the selfie as far more than a representational image. This, in turn, necessarily redirects us away from the object “itself,” and in so doing seeks to understand selfies as a socio-technical phenomenon that momentarily and tentatively holds together a number of differe...
Since last twenty years, human race has experience digital revolution. This revolution has three maj...
Networking Knowledge 8(6)Special Issue: Be Your SelfieNovember 20151IntroductionBe Your Selfie: Iden...
This paper explores whether or not our online social media persona is viewed as authentic. The selfi...
Drawing on a wide corpus of ethnographic research pro- jects, including on photography practices, yo...
This research addresses the ‘Selfie’ as a significant phenomenon of contemporary photography, its un...
Defined as a self-image made with a hand-held mobile device and shared via social media platforms, t...
selfiesphotographysocial mediaself-portraiturephenomenological subjectivityThe contemporary and risi...
This article develops a theory of selfies as reflexive practices of self-coordination. Building on p...
This article examines photographic self-portraiture and investigates what happens when the genre’s p...
This article focuses on photographic self-portraiture and, in particular, it investigates what happe...
A Precarious Selfie is a critical reflection on artistic subjectivity in the context of a networked ...
This article develops and troubles existing approaches to visual self-representation in social media...
More than just a self-taken, static photo shared on social networking sites, selfies are considered ...
As the most obvious provision of social media in the individual world, „selfie“ is confronted at a p...
A Precarious Selfie is a critical reflection on artistic subjectivity in the context of a networked ...
Since last twenty years, human race has experience digital revolution. This revolution has three maj...
Networking Knowledge 8(6)Special Issue: Be Your SelfieNovember 20151IntroductionBe Your Selfie: Iden...
This paper explores whether or not our online social media persona is viewed as authentic. The selfi...
Drawing on a wide corpus of ethnographic research pro- jects, including on photography practices, yo...
This research addresses the ‘Selfie’ as a significant phenomenon of contemporary photography, its un...
Defined as a self-image made with a hand-held mobile device and shared via social media platforms, t...
selfiesphotographysocial mediaself-portraiturephenomenological subjectivityThe contemporary and risi...
This article develops a theory of selfies as reflexive practices of self-coordination. Building on p...
This article examines photographic self-portraiture and investigates what happens when the genre’s p...
This article focuses on photographic self-portraiture and, in particular, it investigates what happe...
A Precarious Selfie is a critical reflection on artistic subjectivity in the context of a networked ...
This article develops and troubles existing approaches to visual self-representation in social media...
More than just a self-taken, static photo shared on social networking sites, selfies are considered ...
As the most obvious provision of social media in the individual world, „selfie“ is confronted at a p...
A Precarious Selfie is a critical reflection on artistic subjectivity in the context of a networked ...
Since last twenty years, human race has experience digital revolution. This revolution has three maj...
Networking Knowledge 8(6)Special Issue: Be Your SelfieNovember 20151IntroductionBe Your Selfie: Iden...
This paper explores whether or not our online social media persona is viewed as authentic. The selfi...