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Sick bunnies and pocket dumps: "Not-selfies" and the genre of self-representation

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posted on 2024-11-14, 16:24 authored by Katrin Tiidenberg, Andrew WhelanAndrew Whelan
This article develops and troubles existing approaches to visual self-representation in social media, questioning the naturalized roles of faces and bodies in mediated self-representation. We argue that self-representation in digital communication should not be treated as synonymous with selfies, and that selfies themselves should not be reductively equated with performances of embodiment. We do this through discussing "not-selfies": visual self-representation consisting of images that do not feature the likenesses of the people who share them, but instead show objects, animals, fictional characters, or other things, as in the practices of #EDC ("everyday carry") and #GPOY ("gratuitous picture of yourself") on platforms such as Tumblr, Facebook, Instagram, and reddit. We present an account of self-representation as an emergent, recognizable, intertextual genre, and show that #EDC and #GPOY practices are best conceptualized as instances of self-representation.

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Citation

Tiidenberg, K. & Whelan, A. (2017). Sick bunnies and pocket dumps: "Not-selfies" and the genre of self-representation. Popular Communication, 15 (2), 141-153.

Journal title

Popular Communication

Volume

15

Issue

2

Pagination

141-153

Language

English

RIS ID

113676

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