Social Media + Society | |
BabyVeillance? Expecting Parents, Online Surveillance and the Cultural Specificity of Pregnancy Apps: | |
Veronica Barassi1  | |
关键词: digital ethnography; pregnancy apps; quantified self; information ecologies; big data; | |
DOI : 10.1177/2056305117707188 | |
学科分类:社会科学、人文和艺术(综合) | |
来源: Sage Journals | |
【 摘 要 】
The rapid proliferation of self-tracking pregnancy apps raises critical questions about the commodification and surveillance of personal data in family life while highlighting key transformations in the social experience of pregnancy. In the last 2âyears, we have seen the emergence of significant research in the field. On one hand, scholars have highlighted the political economic dimension of these apps by showing how they relate to new practices of quantification of the self. On the other hand, they have focused on usersâ experience and on the affective, pleasurable, and socially meaningful dimension of these technologies. Although insightful, current research has yet to consider the cultural specificity of these technologies. Drawing on a digital ethnography of the 10 most reviewed pregnancy apps among UK and US users at the beginning of 2016, the article will show not only that the information ecologies of pregnancy apps are extremely varied but also that usersâ interaction with these technologies is critical and culturally specific. By discussing pregnancy apps as complex ethnographic environmentsâwhich are shaped by different cultural tensions and open-ended processes of negotiation, interaction, and normativityâthe article will argue thatâin the study of infancy onlineâwe need to develop a media anthropological approach and shed light on the cultural complexity of digital technologies while taking into account how users negotiate with digital surveillance and the quantification of the self.
【 授权许可】
CC BY-NC
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
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RO201902021393061ZK.pdf | 105KB | download |