Migration and Mobility in a Digital Age: (Re)Mapping Connectivity and Belonging

Publication date

2019-07-07

Authors

Ponzanesi, SandraISNI 0000000038894338

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

This article charts new directions in digital media and migration studies from a gendered, postcolonial, and multidisciplinary perspective. In particular, the focus is on the ways in which the experience of displacement is resignified and transformed by new digital affordances from different vantage points, engaging with recent developments in datafication, visualization, biometric technologies, platformization, securitization, and extended reality (XR) as part of a drastically changed global mediascape. This article explores the role of new media technologies in rethinking the dynamics of migration and globalization by focusing in particular on the role of migrant users as “connected” and active participants, as well as “screened” and subject to biometric datafication, visualization, and surveillance. Elaborating on concepts such as “migration” and “mobility,” the article analyzes some of the paradoxes offered by our globalized world of intermittent connectivity and troubled belonging, seen as relational definitions that are always fluid, negotiable, and porous.

Keywords

migration, digital media, mobility, connectivity, security, visualization, biometric, datafication, surveillance

Citation

Ponzanesi, S 2019, 'Migration and Mobility in a Digital Age: (Re)Mapping Connectivity and Belonging', Television and New Media, vol. 20, no. 6, pp. 547-557. https://doi.org/10.1177/1527476419857687