Communication Trends

You must sign in to view content.

Sign In

Sign In

Sign Up

Online Technologies: Media Languages and Their Environment

Paper Presentation in a Themed Session
Ricardo Nicola,  Nelyse Salzedas,  João Eduardo Hidalgo,  Maria Arminda Do Nascimento Arruda  

With "diachronic" and "synchronous" cutouts, the media sphere and multimedia will be presented with a view to promoting the reflection and discussion of the online technologies present in the media languages and available in different contemporary platforms. We consider studies and (re) drawings of the modes of (re) configuration of digital poetics, their agents and their genesis in the communication and cognitive processes, according to studies of prominent theoreticians of communication and information technologies in connections with the visual arts and related areas.

Death in the Age of Social Media: Changing Policies and Interactive Memorialization

Paper Presentation in a Themed Session
Theodora Karatzas  

Our relationship with death has evolved over time but a varying level of anxiety around mortality has remained a constant. In the last several decades, this anxiety has seemed to increase as we experience more existential stress and disconnect from the physical world in favor of the digital simulations we’ve built. These external factors have pushed toward a culture of death denial as we distance ourselves from the physicality and daily reality of our lives. Death mediated by the digital world further pushes us from the reality of our own mortal limitations, creating a world where we are safe to perform grief and death recognition without confronting it head-on. As we continue to move our lives online, we must look at how these digital tools, specifically social media, are shaping our interactions with death and how our design, use, and implementation of policies around online social interactions can fall short of considering the delicate nuances of human life. In this paper, I examine the history of our relationship to death as experienced through digital media, starting in the pre-internet age and looking at Vicki Goldberg’s “Death Takes a Holiday, Sort Of,” coming back to the present and exploring the beginnings of Facebook's memorialization function and how policies and practices have taken shape on the platform.

Digital Media

Discussion board not yet opened and is only available to registered participants.