Emotion in the Digital Age : Technologies, Data and Psychosocial Life / By Darren Ellisand Ian Tucker
Material type:
- 9780367540098
- 362.2 ELE

Item type | Current library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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KU Central Library | Rack No. : 13 Annex : 01 Shelve No. : A-01 | Reference Section (Non-Issuable Books) | 362.2 ELE 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | C-1 (NI) | Not For Loan | 52257 | ||
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KU Central Library | Rack No. : 13 Annex : 01 Shelve No. : A-01 | Reference Section (Non-Issuable Books) | 362.2 ELE 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | C-2 (NI) | Not For Loan | 52258 |
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362.1 HUU 2020 Understanding Public Health : Productive Processing of Internal and External Reality / | 362.196 PAL 2002 Living with the AIDS virus : the epidemic and the response in India / | 362.2 ELE 2021 Emotion in the Digital Age : Technologies, Data and Psychosocial Life / | 362.2 ELE 2021 Emotion in the Digital Age : Technologies, Data and Psychosocial Life / | 362.2 MOI 2020 Insane Society : A Sociology of Mental Health / | 362.2 MOI 2020 Insane Society : A Sociology of Mental Health / | 362.4 MOD 2021 Dying in Old Age : U.S. Practice and Policy / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. Emotion in the Digital Age
2. The History and Emergence of Emotion-Technology Relations
3. Artificial Intelligence and Emotion
4. Social Media and Emotion
5. Digital Mental Health
6. Surveillance and Emotion
7. Digital Futures and Emotion
Summary:"Emotion in a Digital Age examines how emotion is understood, researched and experienced in relation to practices of digitisation and datafication said to constitute a digital age. The overarching concern of the book is with how emotion operates in, through, and with digital technologies. The digital landscape is vast, and as such, the authors focus on four key areas of digital practice: artificial intelligence, social media, mental health, and surveillance. Interrogating each area shows how emotion is commodified, symbolised, shared and experienced, and as such operates in multiple dimensions. This includes tracing the emotional impact of early mass media (e.g. cinema) through to efforts to programme AI agents with skills in emotional communication (e.g. mental health chatbots). This timely study offers theoretical, empirical and practical insight regarding the ways that digitisation is changing knowledge and experience of emotion and affective life. Crucially, this involves both the multiple versions of digital technologies designed to engage with emotion (e.g. emotional-AI) through to the broader emotional impact of living in digitally saturated environments. The authors argue that this constitutes a psycho-social way of being in which digital technologies and emotion operate as key dimensions of the ways we simultaneously relate to ourselves as individual subjects, and to others as part of collectives. As such, Emotion in a Digital Age will prove important reading for students and researchers in emotion studies, psychology, science and technology studies, sociology, and related fields"
Description:
Emotion in the Digital Age examines how emotion is understood, researched and experienced in relation to practices of digitisation and datafication said to constitute a digital age. The overarching concern of the book is with how emotion operates in, through, and with digital technologies. The digital landscape is vast, and as such, the authors focus on four key areas of digital practice: artificial intelligence, social media, mental health, and surveillance. Interrogating each area shows how emotion is commodified, symbolised, shared and experienced, and as such operates in multiple dimensions. This includes tracing the emotional impact of early mass media (e.g. cinema) through to efforts to programme AI agents with skills in emotional communication (e.g. mental health chatbots). This timely study offers theoretical, empirical and practical insight regarding the ways that digitisation is changing knowledge and experience of emotion and affective life. Crucially, this involves both the multiple versions of digital technologies designed to engage with emotion (e.g. emotional-AI) through to the broader emotional impact of living in digitally saturated environments. The authors argue that this constitutes a psycho-social way of being in which digital technologies and emotion operate as key dimensions of the ways we simultaneously relate to ourselves as individual subjects and to others as part of collectives. As such, Emotion in the Digital Age will prove important reading for students and researchers in emotion studies, psychology, science and technology studies, sociology, and related fields.
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