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Digital Expressions of the Self(ie): The Social Life of Selfies in India

✍ Scribed by Avishek Ray, Ethiraj Gabriel Dattatreyan, Usha Raman, Martin Web


Publisher
Routledge India
Year
2024
Tongue
English
Leaves
146
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


The book examines the social and cultural role of selfies in India. It looks at how the selfie, unlike the photograph, which was a gesture towards an external reality, remains intimately self-referential, yet reconfigures social ordering, identity formation, agency, and spaces in curious ways.

This volume approaches questions about the construction and performance of the self through the digital selfie and uses this situated, contextualized, and culturally specific phenomenon as a site to explore the themes of self-making, place-making, gender, subjectivity, and power. Highlighting the specific contexts of production, the authors examine the array of self-expressive capabilities realized in a multitude of uses of the selfie that simultaneously reconfigure the self, the space, and the world.

An important study of visual social media culture, the volume will be useful for interpreting everyday media experiences and will be of interest to students and researchers of image studies, visual studies, photography studies, visual culture, media studies, culture studies, cultural anthropology, digital humanities, popular culture, sociology of technology, and South Asian studies.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Endorsement Page
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Figures
Table
Author Biographies
Preface
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1: Introduction: The digital self(ie) and world-making
Framing the digital self
Creative self-making
Points of departure
Note
References
Chapter 2: Still/moving images: Performing masculinity and making place in Delhi’s β€œhotspots”
Theoretical underpinnings, methodological detours
Digital ethnography of place: A patchwork endeavour
Action and romance: Performance towards mastery
Some final thoughts: Making reels without politics
Notes
References
Chapter 3: Probing β€œinstaworthiness”: Siting the selfie
Placemaking and/in aesthete’s gaze
Materiality, spatiality, and imageability
Aesthetic of visual apartness
Agential materialism and the visual outcome of selfie
The thing-ness of the selfie
Notes
References
Chapter 4: Putting the selfie to work: Image making and work/time discipline in the margins of the Indian state
Introduction
Digitizing work/time discipline
Informal networks of visibility in the margins of the hybrid state
Images as evidence: putting the selfie to work
Conclusion
Notes
References
Chapter 5: Posthumous selfie memory: Fan identities and the making of superstars
Introduction
Celebrity deaths in the age of death porn4
Conceptualizing the posthumous selfie memory
Methodology
Data collection and analysis
Phase 1
Phase 2
Findings and discussion
Stars and fans: Death of stars, authentic fandom, and posthumous engagement online
Insiders and Outsiders: Star kids and self-made stars
The posthumous ordinary superstar: kinship networks, provincial middle classes, and success
Conclusion
Limitations
Notes
References
Chapter 6: Creating and curating the performing object
The self in the social network
Understanding self-making through content creation: Method and mode of inquiry
Books and art as ways and windows to the self
Bookstagram: Bookish communities as spaces of self-discovery
Finding yourself in the company of people who read
Fashioning and sustaining the bookish self
Visibility and vulnerability
Strategic presencing, stimulating engagement
Inktober: The artistic community in the age of Instagram
Positioning the artistic self
Visibility, validation, and the critic within
Discovering the new, within and without
Archiving memories, curating meaning
Discussion: Reflecting and revealing the self through a performing object
Conclusion
Notes
References
Index


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