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Maintaining Connections: Octo- and Nonagenarians on Digital ‘Use and Non-use’

Maintaining Connections: Octo- and Nonagenarians on Digital ‘Use and Non-use’ AbstractThe concepts of user and non-user are frequently deployed within media and communications literature. What do these terms mean if examined regarding age and ageing? In this article we explore and trouble these notions through an analysis of twenty-two conversations with a group of octogenarians and nonagenarians living in a retirement home. Their descriptions of their changing uses of media througout lifetime, and their encounters with mobile phones, computers, newspapers, television, radio and landline phones, are presented as a set of ‘techno-biographies’ that challenge binary divisions of use and non-use, linear notions of media adoption, and add texture to the idea of ‘the fourth age’ as a time of life bereft of decisional power. Speaking with octogenarians and nonagenarians provides insights into media desires, needs and uses, and opens up ‘non-use’ as a complex, variegated activity, rather than a state of complete inaction or disinterest. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Nordicom Review de Gruyter

Maintaining Connections: Octo- and Nonagenarians on Digital ‘Use and Non-use’

Nordicom Review , Volume 38 (s1): 13 – Jun 27, 2017

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Publisher
de Gruyter
Copyright
© 2017 Mireia Fernández-Ardèvol et al., published by Sciendo
ISSN
2001-5119
eISSN
2001-5119
DOI
10.1515/nor-2017-0396
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

AbstractThe concepts of user and non-user are frequently deployed within media and communications literature. What do these terms mean if examined regarding age and ageing? In this article we explore and trouble these notions through an analysis of twenty-two conversations with a group of octogenarians and nonagenarians living in a retirement home. Their descriptions of their changing uses of media througout lifetime, and their encounters with mobile phones, computers, newspapers, television, radio and landline phones, are presented as a set of ‘techno-biographies’ that challenge binary divisions of use and non-use, linear notions of media adoption, and add texture to the idea of ‘the fourth age’ as a time of life bereft of decisional power. Speaking with octogenarians and nonagenarians provides insights into media desires, needs and uses, and opens up ‘non-use’ as a complex, variegated activity, rather than a state of complete inaction or disinterest.

Journal

Nordicom Reviewde Gruyter

Published: Jun 27, 2017

Keywords: ageing; octo- & nonagenarian; digital communication media; use; non-use

References