COVID-19,社交媒体的依赖性和无所不在的欲望:前进之路。

4区 医学 Q2 Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Advances in experimental medicine and biology Pub Date : 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1007/978-3-031-61943-4_10
Camila Mozzini-Alister
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引用次数: 0

摘要

从 2020 年到 2023 年,SARS-CoV-2 或 "Covid-19 "病毒的疫苗接种和逐步控制过程使得受监控的运动得以恢复。在这个短暂的历史反思窗口中,本章旨在通过 "无所不在的欲望 "这一概念的视角,揭示当前社交媒体使用和滥用的背景。为此,本研究通过三个不同层面的分析来阐明这一目标:首先,研究可被描述为结构性上瘾的在线互动平台的出现、管理和煽动,以及它们如何导致社交媒体依赖的生物政治学;其次,在 "无所不在的欲望 "这一概念中提供一个框架,以理解我们当前希望通过虚拟个人资料成为一种存在模式和模型的动物政治学,主观地将自身去领土化,从而实现无限性的驱动力;最后,指出 "前进 "之路,打破对线性和进步的一般理解,促进生活和人类情感的非市场化模式,目的是将我们当前对无所不在的渴望转化为对存在的真正渴望。
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COVID-19, Social Media Dependency and Desire for Omnipresence: Ways Forward.

From 2020 until 2023, the process of vaccination and progressive control of the SARS-CoV-2 or "Covid-19" virus has allowed for monitored movement to come back. Within this short window of historical reflexion, this chapter aims to bring light to the current context of social media uses and abuses through the lens of the notion of desire for omnipresence. For that, this study articulates this goal through three different layers of analysis: first, by investigating the emergence, management and incitement of what can be described as structurally addictive platforms of online interaction and how they entail a biopolitics of social media dependency; second, by providing in the notion of desire for omnipresence, a framework to understand the driving force for our current wish to subjectively deterritorialize ourselves toward the limitlessness through a zoopolitics where the virtual profile becomes a mode and a model of existence; finally, by pointing out ways "forward" that disrupt the ordinary understanding of linearity and progress to promote modes of un-marketization of life and human affections with the aim of transforming of our current desire for omnipresence into a genuine desire for presence.

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来源期刊
Advances in experimental medicine and biology
Advances in experimental medicine and biology 医学-医学:研究与实验
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
465
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology provides a platform for scientific contributions in the main disciplines of the biomedicine and the life sciences. This series publishes thematic volumes on contemporary research in the areas of microbiology, immunology, neurosciences, biochemistry, biomedical engineering, genetics, physiology, and cancer research. Covering emerging topics and techniques in basic and clinical science, it brings together clinicians and researchers from various fields.
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