Affiliation:
1. Department of Media and Communication Studies, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Helsinki, P.O. Box 54, FIN-00014 Helsinki, Finland
Abstract
In the ongoing academic discussion regarding what happens to our data after we die, how our data are utilised for commercial profit-making purposes, and what kinds of death-related practices our posthumous data figure in, the notion of digital afterlife is attracting increasing attention. While the concept of digital afterlife has been approached in different ways, the main focus remains on the level of individual loss. The emphasis tends to be on the role of posthumous digital artefacts in grief practices and death-related rituals or on data management issues relating to death. Building on a socio-technical view of digital afterlife, this paper offers, as a novel contribution, an understanding of digital afterlife as a techno-affective assemblage. It argues for the necessity of examining technological and social factors as mutually shaping and brings into the discussion of digital afterlife the notions of relationality, materiality, and the affective potential of data. The paper ends with ruminations about digital afterlife as a posthumanist project.
Reference63 articles.
1. A Sort of Permanence: Digital Remains and Posthuman Encounters with Death;Bell;Conjunctions,2022
2. Altaratz, Doron, and Morse, Tal (2023). Digital Séance: Fabricated Encounters with the Dead. Social Sciences, 12.
3. Tandy, Charles (2018). Death and Anti-Death, Vol. 16: 200 Years After Frankenstein, Ria University Press.
4. Bassett, Debra (2022). The Creation and Inheritance of Digital Afterlives: You Only Live Twice, Springer.
5. Beer, David (2019). The Social Power of Algorithms, Routledge.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献