Digital practices

Mittelweg 36 1/2021

‘Mittelweg 36’ takes a praxeological perspective on digital technology: how selfie culture has changed our actions and interactions; why digitization is a mixed blessing for women; and what datafication does with our everyday lives.

Black gold, Russia’s poison

Eurozine Review 04/2021

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Social media, the Internet of Things and AI continue to transform our lives in ways both seen and unseen, but just what are we trading in the name of efficiency and convenience? In the latest issue of Mittelweg 36, social researchers focus on ‘digital practices’, exploring the extent to which online technology has usurped human agency and what we can do to escape the mechanisms of digital bondage.

From Kodak to curated self

Whether at work or play, our gadgets have transformed how we think and interact with ourselves and each other. The selfie is the prime example. In ‘Me, Myself and I’, Moritz Plewa offers a genealogy of photographic practices throughout late modern culture. ‘The difference between analogue and digital photography cannot be determined by technological differences alone,’ he argues, but ‘must be sought in the changing of photographic practices.’

From early Kodak cameras, which enabled a ‘culture of experience’, to the more recent phenomena of the ‘curated self’, the demarcation between performativity and self-perception has become increasingly blurred. New theoretical approaches are needed to make sense of the ‘recording, post-producing, … viewing, evaluating and commenting digital self.’

Gender and digitization

Whilst technology affects us all, it does so in different and often unequal ways. By bringing domestic life and work into radical relief, COVID-19 has laid bare the facade of a work–life balance, especially for women.

In her article on ‘digital practices between gainful employment and care work’, Tanja Carstensen addresses the confluence of paid and unpaid work, gender and digitization. The latter, she argues, should be understood as a process anchored in our everyday lives and activities. Carstensen writes about the many challenges that women face as they juggle their professional and personal lives. While digital technology can make life easier, it can also ‘intensify, dynamize and radicalize the numerous demands that family and work life place on women’.

Constructed reality

Anyone concerned about the broader implications of the digital age and the way the everyday is constructed in and through media will find Nick Couldry’s and Andreas Hepp’s article on ‘datafication’ compelling (if worrisome) reading. Building on the work of their 2017 book The Mediated Construction of Reality, they describe how, by compiling abstract categories in increasingly abstract ways, big data complexes are increasingly reshaping everyday life.

In addition to mapping the complex constellations of today’s digital interdependencies, Couldry and Hepp are concerned with questioning and challenging the dominance of ‘datafication’ (the transformation of aspects of our lives into data).  Yet, as they point out, ‘big data is not an independent reality outside of the social world, but something that is deeply interwoven with everyday worlds of experience.’ If it all sounds a bit abstract, then one need only think of the power and efficacy of algorithms in entrapping people within cultural or ideological bubbles that reinforce, rather than challenge, their interests, perspectives or political views.

This article is part of the 4/2021 Eurozine review. Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter to get updates on reviews and our latest publishing.

Published 3 March 2021
Original in English
First published by Eurozine

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