Vital Media: The Affective and Temporal Dynamics of Young Cancer Patients’ Social Media Practices

This article presents results from a research project investigating young cancer patients’ general use of social media and their lived experience of the choices and dilemmas involved in using social media in relation to moments of existential crisis. This article’s key finding—based on an extensive...

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Main Authors: Carsten Stage, Karen Hvidtfeldt, Lisbeth Klastrup
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-06-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305120924760
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author Carsten Stage
Karen Hvidtfeldt
Lisbeth Klastrup
author_facet Carsten Stage
Karen Hvidtfeldt
Lisbeth Klastrup
author_sort Carsten Stage
collection DOAJ
description This article presents results from a research project investigating young cancer patients’ general use of social media and their lived experience of the choices and dilemmas involved in using social media in relation to moments of existential crisis. This article’s key finding—based on an extensive survey with 205 young cancer patients and 25 qualitative interviews—is that social media becomes increasingly important for young people after a cancer diagnosis and that these young people engage with social media as—what we will call— vital media . The analysis in this article focuses on affective and temporal media experiences in the empirical material collected and argues that three dimensions of “media vitality” are salient: (1) that young people engage with social media to actively produce vitality in terms of generating a sense of wellbeing or balance by sharing, seeking out, or avoiding particular types of cancer-related content; (2) that young people experience social media as a vital or “lively” technology that introduces unpredictable and sometimes unwanted material into their lives; and (3) that young people feel they are expected to perform or share vital approaches to illness on social media, such as positive or life-affirming—as opposed to negative or pessimistic—accounts of their illness. In this way, the concept of “vital media” addresses strategic, ecological, and cultural aspects of young cancer patients’ social media engagements.
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spelling doaj.art-374567b404e94e5daa8ce203f201690d2022-12-21T18:15:44ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512020-06-01610.1177/2056305120924760Vital Media: The Affective and Temporal Dynamics of Young Cancer Patients’ Social Media PracticesCarsten Stage0Karen Hvidtfeldt1Lisbeth Klastrup2Aarhus University, DenmarkUniversity of Southern Denmark, DenmarkIT University of Copenhagen, DenmarkThis article presents results from a research project investigating young cancer patients’ general use of social media and their lived experience of the choices and dilemmas involved in using social media in relation to moments of existential crisis. This article’s key finding—based on an extensive survey with 205 young cancer patients and 25 qualitative interviews—is that social media becomes increasingly important for young people after a cancer diagnosis and that these young people engage with social media as—what we will call— vital media . The analysis in this article focuses on affective and temporal media experiences in the empirical material collected and argues that three dimensions of “media vitality” are salient: (1) that young people engage with social media to actively produce vitality in terms of generating a sense of wellbeing or balance by sharing, seeking out, or avoiding particular types of cancer-related content; (2) that young people experience social media as a vital or “lively” technology that introduces unpredictable and sometimes unwanted material into their lives; and (3) that young people feel they are expected to perform or share vital approaches to illness on social media, such as positive or life-affirming—as opposed to negative or pessimistic—accounts of their illness. In this way, the concept of “vital media” addresses strategic, ecological, and cultural aspects of young cancer patients’ social media engagements.https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305120924760
spellingShingle Carsten Stage
Karen Hvidtfeldt
Lisbeth Klastrup
Vital Media: The Affective and Temporal Dynamics of Young Cancer Patients’ Social Media Practices
Social Media + Society
title Vital Media: The Affective and Temporal Dynamics of Young Cancer Patients’ Social Media Practices
title_full Vital Media: The Affective and Temporal Dynamics of Young Cancer Patients’ Social Media Practices
title_fullStr Vital Media: The Affective and Temporal Dynamics of Young Cancer Patients’ Social Media Practices
title_full_unstemmed Vital Media: The Affective and Temporal Dynamics of Young Cancer Patients’ Social Media Practices
title_short Vital Media: The Affective and Temporal Dynamics of Young Cancer Patients’ Social Media Practices
title_sort vital media the affective and temporal dynamics of young cancer patients social media practices
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305120924760
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