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Visualising intimacies: The circulation of digital images in the Trinidadian context
Institution:1. Digital Media and Ethnography, University of Sydney, Australia;2. School of Literature, Art, and Media, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, John Woolley Building A20, Science Road, The University of Sydney, NSW, 2006, Australia;1. Department of Neurosurgery, Hospital General Universitario “Gregorio Marañón”, Madrid, Spain;2. Department of Otolaryngology, Hospital General Universitario “Gregorio Marañón”, Madrid, Spain;3. Department of Pathology, Hospital General Universitario “Gregorio Marañón”, Madrid, Spain;1. Department of Internal Medicine, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands;2. Department of Laboratory Medicine, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands;3. Department of Clinical Pharmacy and Pharmacology, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands;4. Top Institute Food and Nutrition, Wageningen, The Netherlands;1. Independent Scholar, Tucson, AZ, 85721, USA;2. School of Geography and Development, The University of Arizona, P.O. Box 210137, Tucson, AZ, 85721, USA
Abstract:This article examines images circulated through mobile media to emphasise the emotion work invested into familial relationships that are defined by place. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork conducted in Trinidad, the article contributes a cross-cultural perspective to literature in digital visual communication and digital media in family relationships that has typically focused on peer-to-peer relationships between youth or that has focused on nuclear households in predominantly Western contexts. The consequences of uses of digital media platforms are strongly intertwined with the category of relationship (mother and daughter, or couples for example), their cultural inflections, relationship hierarchies and the life-stages of individuals. Digital visual communication functions to navigate, maintain and acknowledge relationships that varies across different platforms. The more public uses of images over Facebook to the more private circulation of images over WhatsApp provide examples that illustrate positive aspects of intimacy through constant contact as well as ambivalent feelings of obligation to reciprocate communication compelled by the availability afforded by mobile media. This article advances the understanding of the relationship between emotions, intimacy and mobile media by revealing how norms, ideals and expectations of familyhood and digital practices that are often essentialised are context-driven and specific.
Keywords:Intimacy at a distance  Polymedia  Digital media  Social media  Trinidad  Ethnography  Family relationships
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