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Being at Home With Privacy: Privacy and Mundane Intimacy Through Same-Sex Locative Media Practices

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posted on 2024-11-23, 11:03 authored by Larissa HjorthLarissa Hjorth, Sarah Pink, Heather Horst
Smartphones have ushered in new forms of locative media through the overlay of global positioning system digital media onto physical places. Whereas mobile communication research has focused on corporate, hierarchical, or government surveillance, emerging studies examine the ways locative media practices relate to privacy and surveillance in everyday, intimate contexts. Studies of same-sex forms of intimacy in and through locative media practices have largely attended to the growth and use of male hook-up apps, but have overlooked same-sex female relationships. Beyond hook-up apps, mundane forms of intimacy in same-sex relationships have also received scant attention. This article draws from a broader ethnographic study in Australia over three years exploring the use (and nonuse) of locative media in households as part of their management of privacy, connection, and intimacy with family and friends. By moving the discussion about intimacy beyond hook-up apps, this article focuses on locative media practices of use and nonuse by female same-sex couples.

History

Journal

International Journal of Communication

Volume

12

Start page

1209

End page

1227

Total pages

19

Publisher

University of Southern California * Annenberg Center for Communication

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

Copyright © 2018 (Larissa Hjorth, Sarah Pink, and Heather A. Horst). Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 license.

Former Identifier

2006091392

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2019-05-23

Open access

  • Yes

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