Selfies - disconnection from ICTs
Sociological discussion programme. 'Selfies' - Laurie Taylor explores a peculiarly modern representation of 'self'. Also, people who choose to disconnect from ICTs.
'Selfies' - every day Facebook users upload 350million photos, Instagrammers share 95 million photos and there are 3 billion Snapchat snaps. A central element of visual sharing online involves 'selfies' -which often generate more comment than anything else. But why this fascination with images that can often be repetitive and unimaginative? Do they feed a culture of unhealthy narcissism, as critics assert, or are they a more complex cultural phenomenon? Also, Disconnected - why are some people turning their back on the use of any information communication technologies? Laurie Taylor talks to Mariann Hardy, Acting Director, Advanced Research in Computing at Durham University, about new research which uncovers the motives and lives of a global population which explicitly rejects our hyper connected world.
Producer: Jayne Egerton.
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Explore Further with the Open University
Explore further content from The Open University academic experts and host Laurie Taylor.
RELATED LINKS
READING LIST
Katrin Tiidenberg, Selfies and Why we Love (and Hate) Them, (Emerald Publishing, 2018)
Hardey, M. & Atkinson, R. (2018). Disconnected: Non-users of Information Communication Technologies. Sociological Research Online
Broadcasts
- Wed 4 Jul 201816:00BBC Radio 4
- Mon 9 Jul 201800:15BBC Radio 4
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Thinking Allowed
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