Introduction to the Social Media + Society Special Issue on Selfies: Me-diated Inter-faces

This introduction to the special issue entitled Me-diated Inter-faces begins by bringing into question the concept of positioning: what is it that we are doing when we take a position within the study of social media? Reviewing the work of the inaugural manifestos of the journal Social Media + Socie...

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Main Authors: Katie Warfield, Carolina Cambre, Crystal Abidin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2016-04-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305116641344
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spelling doaj-32affb35f84047b9bd3a3b2055a947142020-11-25T03:09:24ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512016-04-01210.1177/205630511664134410.1177_2056305116641344Introduction to the Social Media + Society Special Issue on Selfies: Me-diated Inter-facesKatie Warfield0Carolina Cambre1Crystal Abidin2Kwantlen Polytechnic University, CanadaConcordia University, CanadaUniversity of Western Australia, AustraliaThis introduction to the special issue entitled Me-diated Inter-faces begins by bringing into question the concept of positioning: what is it that we are doing when we take a position within the study of social media? Reviewing the work of the inaugural manifestos of the journal Social Media + Society on one hand, and the introduction to the special issue on selfies for the International Journal of Communications on the other, this introduction provides both critical and creative in-roads for thinking and re-thinking digital self-images shared on social media. Given the constantly changing nature of social media, this paper is a call to researchers of social media to not fall prey to the ossification of our current positions since theorizing the “social” in social media means always at once theorizing the body. As such this intro offers numerous and diverse perspectives on the body that might inform emerging thoughts on the socially media body. The introduction then provides an overview of the papers in this special issue and concludes by offering openings and ruptures for further discussion, rather than closure of conclusions.https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305116641344
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katie Warfield
Carolina Cambre
Crystal Abidin
spellingShingle Katie Warfield
Carolina Cambre
Crystal Abidin
Introduction to the Social Media + Society Special Issue on Selfies: Me-diated Inter-faces
Social Media + Society
author_facet Katie Warfield
Carolina Cambre
Crystal Abidin
author_sort Katie Warfield
title Introduction to the Social Media + Society Special Issue on Selfies: Me-diated Inter-faces
title_short Introduction to the Social Media + Society Special Issue on Selfies: Me-diated Inter-faces
title_full Introduction to the Social Media + Society Special Issue on Selfies: Me-diated Inter-faces
title_fullStr Introduction to the Social Media + Society Special Issue on Selfies: Me-diated Inter-faces
title_full_unstemmed Introduction to the Social Media + Society Special Issue on Selfies: Me-diated Inter-faces
title_sort introduction to the social media + society special issue on selfies: me-diated inter-faces
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Social Media + Society
issn 2056-3051
publishDate 2016-04-01
description This introduction to the special issue entitled Me-diated Inter-faces begins by bringing into question the concept of positioning: what is it that we are doing when we take a position within the study of social media? Reviewing the work of the inaugural manifestos of the journal Social Media + Society on one hand, and the introduction to the special issue on selfies for the International Journal of Communications on the other, this introduction provides both critical and creative in-roads for thinking and re-thinking digital self-images shared on social media. Given the constantly changing nature of social media, this paper is a call to researchers of social media to not fall prey to the ossification of our current positions since theorizing the “social” in social media means always at once theorizing the body. As such this intro offers numerous and diverse perspectives on the body that might inform emerging thoughts on the socially media body. The introduction then provides an overview of the papers in this special issue and concludes by offering openings and ruptures for further discussion, rather than closure of conclusions.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305116641344
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