重塑在线视频通话中的主体性、交流和空间习惯

IF 1.6 2区 社会学 Q2 GEOGRAPHY
Area Pub Date : 2023-10-07 DOI:10.1111/area.12903
Lucy Koh, Andrew Lapworth
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引用次数: 0

摘要

正在流行的 COVID-19 大流行给我们生活的许多领域带来了深刻的变化,其中最重要的可能是我们的沟通方式。数以百万计的人通过使用在线视频通话来重新确认与朋友、同事和更广泛社区的关系,从而摆脱了与世隔绝和行动不便的物理限制,这证明了我们对社会联系的重要需求。本文通过对在线视频通话平台用户的深入定性访谈,探讨了视频通话的社会和主观影响,以及它们如何改变了与自己和他人的惯常关系模式。本文认为,要把握此类技术接触所产生的影响,就必须采用新的思维模式,以适应技术塑造我们的思维和行为方式时所采用的不那么有意识、但却更加物质化的过程。在对这些无意识和非表象的潜能进行理论化时,本文采用了费利克斯-拉瓦松(Félix Ravaisson)关于习惯的创新理论。与那些将习惯归结为不假思索地自动重复相同事物的思想家不同,我们探讨了拉瓦松的习惯理论如何提供了一种动态本体论,用于理解身体如何变化,以及变化如何通过与技术的接触在身体中记录下来。我们认为,这种习惯概念化开辟了一种强有力的思考方式,让我们了解在线视频通话的重复使用如何与新的注意力习惯的产生联系在一起,改变了我们感知自身主体性、他人以及我们生活和工作空间并与之建立联系的体现方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Refiguring habits of subjectivity, communication, and space in online video calls

Refiguring habits of subjectivity, communication, and space in online video calls

The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has brought profound change to many areas of our lives, and perhaps most of all in terms of how we communicate. A testament to our vital need for social connection, millions of people have sought to shed the physical constraints of isolation and restricted mobility by using online video calling to reaffirm relations with friends, colleagues and wider communities. Drawing on qualitative in-depth interviews with users of online video call platforms, this paper explores the social and subjective impacts of video calling, and how they are transforming habitual modes of relating to ourselves and others. The paper argues that grasping the impact of such technological encounters requires new modes of thinking attuned to the less conscious and more material processes though which technologies come to shape how we think and behave. In theorising these unconscious and non-representational potentials, the paper engages with Félix Ravaisson's innovative theorisation of habit. In contrast to those thinkers who would reduce habit to the unthinking and automatic repetition of the same, we explore how Ravaisson's theorisation of habit offers a dynamic ontology for understanding how bodies change and how change comes to be registered in bodies through encounters with technology. We argue that this conceptualisation of habit opens a powerful way of thinking about how the repeated use of online video calls has become bound with the production of new habits of attention, transforming the embodied ways in which we perceive and relate to our own subjectivities, other people, and the spaces in which we live and work.

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来源期刊
Area
Area GEOGRAPHY-
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
13.60%
发文量
80
审稿时长
24 weeks
期刊介绍: Area publishes ground breaking geographical research and scholarship across the field of geography. Whatever your interests, reading Area is essential to keep up with the latest thinking in geography. At the cutting edge of the discipline, the journal: • is the debating forum for the latest geographical research and ideas • is an outlet for fresh ideas, from both established and new scholars • is accessible to new researchers, including postgraduate students and academics at an early stage in their careers • contains commentaries and debates that focus on topical issues, new research results, methodological theory and practice and academic discussion and debate • provides rapid publication
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