Keeping Distance

The Covid-19 pandemic has significantly changed communication practices, as physical proximity has been curtailed in order to deal with a global pandemic. For many, video-mediated communication has replaced face-to-face meetings, as work, education and leisure activities have been moved online. Whil...

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Main Author: Asko Lehmuskallio
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: arthistoricum.net 2021-10-01
Series:21: Inquiries into Art, History, and the Visual
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/xxi/article/view/83382
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author Asko Lehmuskallio
author_facet Asko Lehmuskallio
author_sort Asko Lehmuskallio
collection DOAJ
description The Covid-19 pandemic has significantly changed communication practices, as physical proximity has been curtailed in order to deal with a global pandemic. For many, video-mediated communication has replaced face-to-face meetings, as work, education and leisure activities have been moved online. While video-mediated communication has a longer history, we are witnessing an unprecedented scale and scope of video-mediated interactions. These affect established ecologies of social interaction, and participants need to learn and negotiate novel stocks of knowledge for appropriate ways of being together. While in public discussions many lament the lack of face-to-face interactions with those dear to us, it is argued that video-mediated communication tends to socially sort our interactions towards those we already know, or towards those who are introduced to us via trusted intermediaries: it is much less amenable to the unexpected, and hence to the valuing of diversity in our social encounters.
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spelling doaj.art-6947edcccf374ae3833911d836dfd6732022-12-21T19:46:07Zdeuarthistoricum.net21: Inquiries into Art, History, and the Visual2701-15692701-15502021-10-012310.11588/xxi.2021.3.83382Keeping DistanceAsko LehmuskallioThe Covid-19 pandemic has significantly changed communication practices, as physical proximity has been curtailed in order to deal with a global pandemic. For many, video-mediated communication has replaced face-to-face meetings, as work, education and leisure activities have been moved online. While video-mediated communication has a longer history, we are witnessing an unprecedented scale and scope of video-mediated interactions. These affect established ecologies of social interaction, and participants need to learn and negotiate novel stocks of knowledge for appropriate ways of being together. While in public discussions many lament the lack of face-to-face interactions with those dear to us, it is argued that video-mediated communication tends to socially sort our interactions towards those we already know, or towards those who are introduced to us via trusted intermediaries: it is much less amenable to the unexpected, and hence to the valuing of diversity in our social encounters.https://journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/xxi/article/view/83382ScreensSocial SortingProxemicsSocial Interaction
spellingShingle Asko Lehmuskallio
Keeping Distance
21: Inquiries into Art, History, and the Visual
Screens
Social Sorting
Proxemics
Social Interaction
title Keeping Distance
title_full Keeping Distance
title_fullStr Keeping Distance
title_full_unstemmed Keeping Distance
title_short Keeping Distance
title_sort keeping distance
topic Screens
Social Sorting
Proxemics
Social Interaction
url https://journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/xxi/article/view/83382
work_keys_str_mv AT askolehmuskallio keepingdistance