Affiliation:
1. American University of Sovereign Nations, Spain
Abstract
This chapter is a philosophical essay on how digital ethnography can shed light upon digital hate (especially homicidal hate) and self-harm. The author will do it by attending to the planned (ex)termination of a physical and social individual by herself or by the few ones' havoc against the rest of the people. Likewise, the author will meditate on the reality of lobbies and parties' silent wars and liberticide from different perspectives (post-structuralist, feminist, etc.) to attain a plural view on it while observing the role of digital ethnography in societies ranging from Indonesia to Spain. Therefore, it's an original study that embraces a unique scope of the unwilling ending of human existence and personas from a different and non-politicised angle.
Reference125 articles.
1. Agha, N., & Magsi, H. (2017). Need for creating secure cyber spaces: Evidences of cyber harassment from female Pakistani university students. Pakistan Journal of Women’s Studies= Alam-e-Niswan= Alam-i Nisvan, 24(1), 89.
2. Androutsopoulos, J. (2008). Potentials and limitations of discourse-centred online ethnography. Language@ Internet, 5(8).
3. Ardèvol, E., & Gómez-Cruz, E. (2014). Digital ethnography and media practices. The International Encyclopedia of Media Studies, 7, 498–518.
4. Reactions to the Pandemic in Latin America and Brazil: Are Religions Essential Services?;O.Bandeira;International Journal of Latin American Religions,2020
5. Active engagement with stigmatised communities through digital ethnography.;M. J.Barratt;Qualitative Research,2016
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. An In-Depth Analysis of the Bioethical Implications of Stigma;Bioethics of Displacement and Its Implications;2023-06-16