This article investigates one example of how affect is articulated in the self-cutting of words into the skin and how the meaning of this multimodal [statement is modified through remediation. According to Tomkins, affects are understood as intensities that are impossible to frame as feelings or emotions. A theoretical framework based on Laclau’s and Mouffe’s discourse theory and the multimodal categories developed by Kress and van Leeuwen is used. Photographs of self-cutting and statements from people who cut themselves are examined through content analyses. The results show that words that had been cut into the skin often referred to painful experiences, disgust directed against themselves, or social isolation. Further, the study shows th...
As society has absorbed the cornucopia of digital technologies of the late twentieth and early twent...
"Die Entwicklung von Web 2.0-Technologien hat die Möglichkeiten des Selbstausdrucks drastisch vergrö...
"Die Entwicklung von Web 2.0-Technologien hat die Möglichkeiten des Selbstausdrucks drastisch vergrö...
This article investigates one example of how affect is articulated in the self-cutting of words into...
In this chapter some results from a study of over 6000 photographs of self-inflicted injuries is pre...
One of the consequences of the widespread use and ubiquity of digital technologies is how a growing ...
Abstract: The advancement of Web 2.0 technologies has drastically extended the realm of self-express...
Digital media offer new domains for people to articulate aspects of their everyday self and share re...
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 (DMCA) signaled that network communication technologies...
This chapter suggests that the essence of digitalization affects people’s ability and desire for psy...
Affect and Social Media is an edited collection of twenty bite sized articles by leading scholars fr...
This article provides the theoretical background for this Special Issue which explores the mediatiza...
Research on the processes of mediatization aims to explore the mutual shaping of media and social li...
A research paper by Catharine Morgan and others at Manchester University, recently published in the ...
In the age of digital media how might we speak about images of torture, and how might we regard the ...
As society has absorbed the cornucopia of digital technologies of the late twentieth and early twent...
"Die Entwicklung von Web 2.0-Technologien hat die Möglichkeiten des Selbstausdrucks drastisch vergrö...
"Die Entwicklung von Web 2.0-Technologien hat die Möglichkeiten des Selbstausdrucks drastisch vergrö...
This article investigates one example of how affect is articulated in the self-cutting of words into...
In this chapter some results from a study of over 6000 photographs of self-inflicted injuries is pre...
One of the consequences of the widespread use and ubiquity of digital technologies is how a growing ...
Abstract: The advancement of Web 2.0 technologies has drastically extended the realm of self-express...
Digital media offer new domains for people to articulate aspects of their everyday self and share re...
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 (DMCA) signaled that network communication technologies...
This chapter suggests that the essence of digitalization affects people’s ability and desire for psy...
Affect and Social Media is an edited collection of twenty bite sized articles by leading scholars fr...
This article provides the theoretical background for this Special Issue which explores the mediatiza...
Research on the processes of mediatization aims to explore the mutual shaping of media and social li...
A research paper by Catharine Morgan and others at Manchester University, recently published in the ...
In the age of digital media how might we speak about images of torture, and how might we regard the ...
As society has absorbed the cornucopia of digital technologies of the late twentieth and early twent...
"Die Entwicklung von Web 2.0-Technologien hat die Möglichkeiten des Selbstausdrucks drastisch vergrö...
"Die Entwicklung von Web 2.0-Technologien hat die Möglichkeiten des Selbstausdrucks drastisch vergrö...