Disentangling: The Geographies of Digital Disconnection

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Digital networking platforms like Facebook and Twitter have revolutionized everyday human interaction by facilitating the search for, and access to, information, entertainment, and social connection. But with the rise of digital surveillance and data extraction for profit, more people are seeking not just to disconnect from technology but to fully disentangle themselves from the widespread social, economic, and political networks of digital communications.Disentangling offers an interdisciplinary global analysis of this growing trend toward disconnection. Moving beyond technological disconnection, this volume proposes the term "disentangling" as a lens for re-thinking the structures of our digital world and categorizing the ways in which people reject, avoid, or rework their digital networks. Across twelve chapters, contributors explore the existential issues stemming from digitally entangled lives, including cultural capital and digital "detox" retreats, and investigate how geographies of disconnection relate to wider societal challenges. Additional chapters explore connections between digital disconnection and other forms of disconnection, including death, sleep, and the abandonment of human settlements. The volume closes with a reflection on connectivity in the post-pandemic society and how we might rework our connections to fit a "socially distanced" world.Blending philosophy and sociology with media geography, Disentangling offers a crucial reflection on how we might unravel our digital dependence by reasserting resilient boundaries between ourselves and the surrounding political, economic, cultural, and technological systems.

Author(s): André Jansson and Paul C. Adams
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2021

Language: English
Pages: 330

cover
Disentangling
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgments
Editors
Contributors
Introduction: Rethinking the Entangling Force of Connective Media
Part 1
1. Disconnection and Reconnection as Resistance to Geosurveillance
2. Locational Technologies in Post-​disaster Infrastructure Space: Uneven Access to OpenStreetMap in Post-​earthquake Haiti
3. Disconnection as Distinction: A Bourdieusian Study of Where People Withdraw from Digital Media
4. Digital Disconnection as Othering: Immersion, “Authenticity” and the Politics of Experience
Part 2
5. Automating Digital Afterlives
6. Senses and Sensors of Sleep: Digital Mediation and Disconnection in Sleep Architectures
7. Digital Ruins: Virtual Worlds as Landscapes of Disconnection
8. “Think on Paper, Share Online”: Interrogating the Sense of Slowness and Disconnection in the Rise of Shouzhang in China
Part 3
9. Disconnect to Reconnect! Self-​help to Regain an Authentic Sense of Space Through Digital Detoxing
10. Retreat Culture and Therapeutic Disconnection
11. Networked Intimacies: Pandemic Dis/​Connections Between Anxiety, Joy, and Laughter
12. Paradoxes of Disconnected Connection
Index