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Emotion in the Digital Age

Technologies, Data and Psychosocial Life

Darren Ellis author Ian Tucker author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd

Published:29th Apr '22

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Emotion in the Digital Age cover

This insightful exploration of emotions in a digital context reveals how technology shapes our emotional experiences and interactions, making Emotion in the Digital Age essential reading for various fields.

This book delves into the intricate relationship between emotion and digital technologies, exploring how our emotional experiences are shaped and transformed in the digital landscape. Emotion in the Digital Age addresses critical questions about the impact of digitized emotions on our personal identities and everyday interactions. It is particularly relevant for scholars in emotion studies, psychology, science and technology studies, sociology, and related disciplines, offering a comprehensive examination of how emotions are understood and experienced in a world increasingly dominated by digital practices.

Focusing on four key areas—artificial intelligence, social media, mental health, and surveillance—the authors investigate how emotions are commodified, symbolized, shared, and experienced in these contexts. By tracing the evolution of emotional engagement from early mass media, such as cinema, to contemporary applications like mental health chatbots, Emotion in the Digital Age reveals the multifaceted dimensions of emotional experiences in a digitized world. This exploration provides both theoretical and empirical insights into the changing nature of knowledge and experience related to emotion and affective life.

The book argues that our emotional lives are now intertwined with digital technologies, creating a psycho-social framework where our relationships with ourselves and others are influenced by these tools. As we navigate a digitally saturated environment, understanding the interplay between emotion and technology is crucial. Emotion in the Digital Age serves as a vital resource for students and researchers eager to comprehend the complexities of emotion in the contemporary digital era.

"In this book, the authors delve deep into the affective vibrancies and forces of digital life. As they show, feelings are the foundation of many online interactions and content. Feelings are aroused with and through the internet and compel us to want to stay engaged online - to upload, like, comment, share and post photos, videos, emojis, GIFs and memes. This book provides important insights into these processes."

Prof. Deborah Lupton, author of Data Selves: More-than-Human Perspectives (Polity) and Digital Food Cultures (Routledge)

"From affective atmospheres to woebots, from artificial intelligence to the emojification of the everyday, Darren Ellis and Ian Tucker pursue how bodies, collective and individual, are continually shifting in conjunction with technological and digital processes. Always empirically situated, Ellis and Tucker’s nuanced psycho-social approach to affect and emotion reveals possibilities for critical intervention into our contemporary moment while simultaneously opening pathways for future-oriented analyses to undertake."

Prof. Gregory J. Seigworth, co-editor of the Affect Theory Reader (Duke University Press, 2010) and co-editor of Capacious: Journal for Emerging Affect Inquiry

ISBN: 9780367540098

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 213g

142 pages