9780262037853-0262037858-The Qualified Self: Social Media and the Accounting of Everyday Life

The Qualified Self: Social Media and the Accounting of Everyday Life

ISBN-13: 9780262037853
ISBN-10: 0262037858
Edition: 1
Author: Lee Humphreys
Publication date: 2018
Publisher: The MIT Press
Format: Hardcover 200 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780262037853
ISBN-10: 0262037858
Edition: 1
Author: Lee Humphreys
Publication date: 2018
Publisher: The MIT Press
Format: Hardcover 200 pages

Summary

The Qualified Self: Social Media and the Accounting of Everyday Life (ISBN-13: 9780262037853 and ISBN-10: 0262037858), written by authors Lee Humphreys, was published by The MIT Press in 2018. With an overall rating of 3.6 stars, it's a notable title among other Social Media (Internet & Social Media, Social Media for Business, Engineering, Social Aspects, Technology, Communication & Media Studies, Social Sciences) books. You can easily purchase or rent The Qualified Self: Social Media and the Accounting of Everyday Life (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Social Media books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.27.

Description

How sharing the mundane details of daily life did not start with Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube but with pocket diaries, photo albums, and baby books.

Social critiques argue that social media have made us narcissistic, that Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube are all vehicles for me-promotion. In The Qualified Self, Lee Humphreys offers a different view. She shows that sharing the mundane details of our lives―what we ate for lunch, where we went on vacation, who dropped in for a visit―didn't begin with mobile devices and social media. People have used media to catalog and share their lives for several centuries. Pocket diaries, photo albums, and baby books are the predigital precursors of today's digital and mobile platforms for posting text and images. The ability to take selfies has not turned us into needy narcissists; it's part of a longer story about how people account for everyday life.

Humphreys refers to diaries in which eighteenth-century daily life is documented with the brevity and precision of a tweet, and cites a nineteenth-century travel diary in which a young woman complains that her breakfast didn't agree with her. Diaries, Humphreys explains, were often written to be shared with family and friends. Pocket diaries were as mobile as smartphones, allowing the diarist to record life in real time. Humphreys calls this chronicling, in both digital and nondigital forms, media accounting. The sense of self that emerges from media accounting is not the purely statistics-driven “quantified self,” but the more well-rounded qualified self. We come to understand ourselves in a new way through the representations of ourselves that we create to be consumed.

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