Sharing the Abject in Digital Culture

Menstruation has been picked up lately by the ‘tech’ industry. Today millions of users track their period cycle using reproductive health apps, and menstruation tracking is an integrated feature in Apple’s HealthKit software platform.The digitization of menstruation raises several questions about t...

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Main Author: Marie Louise Juul Søndergaard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Digital Aesthetics Research Cener 2016-02-01
Series:A Peer-Reviewed Journal About
Online Access:https://aprja.net//article/view/116039
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author Marie Louise Juul Søndergaard
author_facet Marie Louise Juul Søndergaard
author_sort Marie Louise Juul Søndergaard
collection DOAJ
description Menstruation has been picked up lately by the ‘tech’ industry. Today millions of users track their period cycle using reproductive health apps, and menstruation tracking is an integrated feature in Apple’s HealthKit software platform.The digitization of menstruation raises several questions about the cultural aspects of menstruation in an exchange economy. What happens to the cultural complexities of menstruation, and the body in general, when through digitization it changes value from excess to exchange? With this speculation I aim to investigate the relation between menstruation data as abject, taboo, and excess, in order to consider governed principles of subjectivity, intimacy, and sociality. Drawing on Georges Bataille’s notion of excess, Mary Douglas’ analysis of dirt, and Julia Kristeva’s notion of the abject, I will present a cultural analysis of menstruation tracking, including my own intervention Periodshare. Focusing on the relation between menstruation-as-dirt and data-as-purity, I will discuss complexities and ambiguities of data and the selfdisciplined quantified self as cultural objects.
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spelling doaj.art-c85e17f3e0224596999d26ff4bb2653b2023-10-04T12:49:06ZengDigital Aesthetics Research CenerA Peer-Reviewed Journal About2245-77552016-02-015110.7146/aprja.v5i1.116039Sharing the Abject in Digital CultureMarie Louise Juul Søndergaard Menstruation has been picked up lately by the ‘tech’ industry. Today millions of users track their period cycle using reproductive health apps, and menstruation tracking is an integrated feature in Apple’s HealthKit software platform.The digitization of menstruation raises several questions about the cultural aspects of menstruation in an exchange economy. What happens to the cultural complexities of menstruation, and the body in general, when through digitization it changes value from excess to exchange? With this speculation I aim to investigate the relation between menstruation data as abject, taboo, and excess, in order to consider governed principles of subjectivity, intimacy, and sociality. Drawing on Georges Bataille’s notion of excess, Mary Douglas’ analysis of dirt, and Julia Kristeva’s notion of the abject, I will present a cultural analysis of menstruation tracking, including my own intervention Periodshare. Focusing on the relation between menstruation-as-dirt and data-as-purity, I will discuss complexities and ambiguities of data and the selfdisciplined quantified self as cultural objects. https://aprja.net//article/view/116039
spellingShingle Marie Louise Juul Søndergaard
Sharing the Abject in Digital Culture
A Peer-Reviewed Journal About
title Sharing the Abject in Digital Culture
title_full Sharing the Abject in Digital Culture
title_fullStr Sharing the Abject in Digital Culture
title_full_unstemmed Sharing the Abject in Digital Culture
title_short Sharing the Abject in Digital Culture
title_sort sharing the abject in digital culture
url https://aprja.net//article/view/116039
work_keys_str_mv AT marielouisejuulsøndergaard sharingtheabjectindigitalculture