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Connecting Families? : Information & Communication Technologies, Generations, and the Life Course

Title
Connecting Families? : Information & Communication Technologies, Generations, and the Life Course / edited by Barbara Barbosa Neves and Cláudia Casimiro.
ISBN
9781447339953
9781447339946
Publication
Bristol, UK : Policy Press, 2018.
Manufacture
Baltimore, Md. : Project MUSE, 2021
Copyright Notice Date
©2018.
Physical Description
1 online resource (324 pages): illustrations
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
Description based on print version record.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
"Are Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) connecting families? And what does this mean in terms of family routines, relationships, norms, work, intimacy and privacy? This edited collectiont akes a life course and generational perspective covering theory, including posthumanism and strong structuration theory, and methodology, including digital and cross-disciplinary methods. It presents a series of case studies on topics such as intergenerational connections, work-life balance, transnational families, digital storytelling and mobile parenting. It will give studients, researchers and practitioners a variety of tools to make sense of how ICTs are used, appropriated and domesticated in family life. These tools allow for an informed and critical understanding ICTs and family dynamics"--Back cover image.
Variant and related titles
Project MUSE books annual backfile collection 2021.
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
July 13, 2023
Contents
The family has become a network / Barry Wellman
Connecting families? An introduction / Barbara Barbosa Neves and Cláudia Casimiro
Theoretical perspectives on technology and society: implications for understanding the relationship between ICTs and family life / Natasha Mauthner and Karolina Kazimierczak
Recursive approaches to technology adoption, families, and the life course: actor network theory and strong structuration theory / Geoffrey Mead and Barbara Barbosa Neves
Weaving family connections on- and offline: the turn to networked individualism / Anabel Quan-Haase, Hua Wang, Barry Wellman, and Renwen Zhang
Oversharing in the time of selfies: an aesthetics of disappearance? / Amanda du Preez
The application of digital methods in a life course approach to family studies / Alexia Maddox
Cross-disciplinary research methods to study technology use, family, and life course dynamics: lessons from an action research project on social isolation and loneliness in later life / Barbara Barbosa Neves, Ron Baecker, Diana Carvalho, and Alexandra Sanders
From object to instrument: technologies as tools for family relations and family research / Cláudia Casimiro and Magda Nico
Use of communication technology to maintain intergenerational contact: toward an understanding of 'digital solidarity' / Siyun Peng, Merril Silverstein, J. Jill Suitor, Megan Gilligan, Woosang Hwang, Sangbo Nam, and Brianna Routh
Careful families and care as 'kinwork': an intergenerational study of families and digital media use in Melbourne, Australia / Jolynna Sinanan and Larissa Hjorth
Floating narratives: transnational families and digital storytelling / Catalina Arango Patiño
Rescue chains and care talk among immigrants and their left-behind parents / Sondra Cuban
'Wherever you go, wherever you are, I am with you...connected with my mobile': the use of mobile text messages for the maintenance of family and romantic relations / Bernadette Kneidlinger-Müller
Permeability of work-family boders: effects of information and communication technologies on work-family conflict at the childcare stage in Japan / Yuka Sakamoto
Digital connections and family practices / Elizabeth B. Silva.
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