Interstitial Copresence: Experiencing Self With and Within Everyday Forms of Electronically Mediated Communication

Cell phones and the Internet have become cornerstones in the daily lives of most Americans. Researchers have rigorously studied numerous dimensions of electronically mediated communication (EMC). Yet, very little research has explored the context and consequences of negotiating multiple forms of EMC...

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Main Author: Seiler, Steven J.
Format: Others
Published: Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/849
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spelling ndltd-UTENN-oai-trace.tennessee.edu-utk_graddiss-17982011-12-13T16:04:05Z Interstitial Copresence: Experiencing Self With and Within Everyday Forms of Electronically Mediated Communication Seiler, Steven J. Cell phones and the Internet have become cornerstones in the daily lives of most Americans. Researchers have rigorously studied numerous dimensions of electronically mediated communication (EMC). Yet, very little research has explored the context and consequences of negotiating multiple forms of EMC within everyday life. The purpose of this study was to explore the impact of everyday forms of electronically mediated communication (EvEMC) – cell phone talk, text messages, instant messages, and email – on self-work, particularly within personal relationships. Results of OLS regression analyses of survey data collected from 617 college students and qualitative data analysis of three subsequent focus groups suggested that negotiating personal relationships with and within EvEMC produces a sense of interstitial copresence, which is an awareness of the convergence of perpetual copresence within a digital environment and presence or copresence within a physical environment. The findings suggested that interstitial copresence is inherently Janus-faced. EvEMC provided people with a strong sense of freedom and control. However, negotiating personal relationships within interstitial copresence resulted in dissolution of relational boundaries. Consequently, deceptive tactics were commonly used to negotiate self-presentation within interstitial copresence, which had consequences for people’s self-appraisals as well. Since important others were expected to be accessible virtually anytime and anywhere, people with a strong sense of interstitial copresence often had an adverse emotional reaction when important others did not answer their calls or quickly reply to their messages or call or send messages regularly. As personal relationships negotiated within interstitial copresence move toward totality, the consequences for both the self and the relationships become more pronounced. Ultimately, the study concludes that self-work with and within interstitial copresence produces an interstitial self – a relational self that is, at all times, situated within a physical environment and a digital environment, yet never completely in either environment. 2010-08-01 text application/pdf http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/849 Doctoral Dissertations Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange Self-Work Identity Personal Relationships Boundary Work Cell Phones Computer-Mediated Communication Social Psychology and Interaction
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Self-Work
Identity
Personal Relationships
Boundary Work
Cell Phones
Computer-Mediated Communication
Social Psychology and Interaction
spellingShingle Self-Work
Identity
Personal Relationships
Boundary Work
Cell Phones
Computer-Mediated Communication
Social Psychology and Interaction
Seiler, Steven J.
Interstitial Copresence: Experiencing Self With and Within Everyday Forms of Electronically Mediated Communication
description Cell phones and the Internet have become cornerstones in the daily lives of most Americans. Researchers have rigorously studied numerous dimensions of electronically mediated communication (EMC). Yet, very little research has explored the context and consequences of negotiating multiple forms of EMC within everyday life. The purpose of this study was to explore the impact of everyday forms of electronically mediated communication (EvEMC) – cell phone talk, text messages, instant messages, and email – on self-work, particularly within personal relationships. Results of OLS regression analyses of survey data collected from 617 college students and qualitative data analysis of three subsequent focus groups suggested that negotiating personal relationships with and within EvEMC produces a sense of interstitial copresence, which is an awareness of the convergence of perpetual copresence within a digital environment and presence or copresence within a physical environment. The findings suggested that interstitial copresence is inherently Janus-faced. EvEMC provided people with a strong sense of freedom and control. However, negotiating personal relationships within interstitial copresence resulted in dissolution of relational boundaries. Consequently, deceptive tactics were commonly used to negotiate self-presentation within interstitial copresence, which had consequences for people’s self-appraisals as well. Since important others were expected to be accessible virtually anytime and anywhere, people with a strong sense of interstitial copresence often had an adverse emotional reaction when important others did not answer their calls or quickly reply to their messages or call or send messages regularly. As personal relationships negotiated within interstitial copresence move toward totality, the consequences for both the self and the relationships become more pronounced. Ultimately, the study concludes that self-work with and within interstitial copresence produces an interstitial self – a relational self that is, at all times, situated within a physical environment and a digital environment, yet never completely in either environment.
author Seiler, Steven J.
author_facet Seiler, Steven J.
author_sort Seiler, Steven J.
title Interstitial Copresence: Experiencing Self With and Within Everyday Forms of Electronically Mediated Communication
title_short Interstitial Copresence: Experiencing Self With and Within Everyday Forms of Electronically Mediated Communication
title_full Interstitial Copresence: Experiencing Self With and Within Everyday Forms of Electronically Mediated Communication
title_fullStr Interstitial Copresence: Experiencing Self With and Within Everyday Forms of Electronically Mediated Communication
title_full_unstemmed Interstitial Copresence: Experiencing Self With and Within Everyday Forms of Electronically Mediated Communication
title_sort interstitial copresence: experiencing self with and within everyday forms of electronically mediated communication
publisher Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange
publishDate 2010
url http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/849
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