ABSTRACT

Digital Media, Sharing and Everyday Life provides nuanced accounts of the processes of sharing in digital culture and the complexities that arise in them. The book explores definitions of sharing, and the roles that our digital devices and the platforms we use play in these practices.

 

Drawing upon practice theory to outline a theoretical framework of sharing practice, the book emphasizes the need for a coherent and consistent framework of sharing in digital culture and explains what this framework might look like. With insightful descriptions, the book draws out the relationship of sharing to privacy and control, the labored strategies and boundaries of reciprocation, and our relationships with the technologies which mediate sharing practices.

 

The volume is an essential read for researchers, postgraduate and undergraduate students in Media and Communication, New Media, Sociology, Internet Studies, and Cultural Studies.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

section 9Section I|47 pages

chapter 2|15 pages

Theories of Sharing

chapter 3|21 pages

Practice-Centred Approaches to Sharing

section 57Section II|77 pages

chapter 4|28 pages

Boundaries of Disclosure

chapter 5|24 pages

Reciprocity and Other Labours

chapter 6|23 pages

Intimate Technologies