Digital technologies and generational identity : ICT usage across the life course

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Digital technologies and generational identity : ICT usage across the life course

edited by Sakari Taipale, Terhi-Anna Wilska and Chris Gilleard

(Routledge key themes in health and society)

Routledge, 2018

  • : hbk

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The short lifetime of digital technologies means that generational identities are difficult to establish around any particular technologies let alone around more far-reaching socio-technological 'revolutions'. Examining the consumption and use of digital technologies throughout the stages of human development, this book provides a valuable overview of ICT usage and generational differences. It focuses on the fields of home, family and consumption as key arenas where these processes are being enacted, sometimes strengthening old distinctions, sometimes creating new ones, always embodying an inherent restlessness that affects all aspects and all stages of life. Combining a collection of international perspectives from a range of fields, including social gerontology, social policy, sociology, anthropology and gender studies, Digital Technologies and Generational Identity weaves empirical evidence with theoretical insights on the role of digital technologies across the life course. It takes a unique post-Mannheimian standpoint, arguing that each life stage can be defined by attitudes towards, and experiences of, digital technologies as these act as markers of generational differences and identity. It will be of particular value to academics of social policy and sociology with interests in the life course and human development as well as those studying media and communication, youth and childhood studies, and gerontology.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1. Introduction (Sakari Taipale, Terhi-Anna Wilska and Chris Gilleard) Section I: Historical, theoretical, and methodological perspectives Chapter 2. The place of age in the digital revolution (Chris Gilleard) Chapter 3. Generational analysis as a methodological approach to study mediatised social change (Goeran Bolin) Chapter 4. Generational analysis of people's experience of ICTs (Leslie Haddon) Section II: Family generations and ICT Chapter 5. Mobile life of middle-aged employees: fragmented time and softer schedules (Mia Tammelin and Timo Anttila) Chapter 6. Intergenerational solidarity and ICT usage: empirical insights from Finnish and Slovenian families (Sakari Taipale, Andraz Petrovcic and Vesna Dolnicar) Chapter 7. Gendering the mobile phone: a life course approach (Carla Ganito) Chapter 8. How young people experience elderly people's use of digital technologies in everyday life (Leopoldina Fortunati) Chapter 9. ICTs and client trust in the care of old people in Finland (Helena Hirvonen) Chapter 10. Mobile phone use and social generations in rural India (Sirpa Tenhunen) Section III Consumption, lifestyles and markets Chapter 11. Necessities to all? The role of ICTs in the everyday life of the middle-aged and elderly between 1999 and 2014 (Terhi-Anna Wilska and Sanna-Mari Kuoppamaki) Chapter 12. A risk to privacy or a need for security? Digital domestic technologies in the lives of young adults and late middle-agers (Sanna-Mari Kuoppamaki, Outi Uusitalo and Tiina Kemppainen) Chapter 13. Personality traits and computer use in midlife: leisure activities and work characteristics as mediators (Tiia Kekalainen and Katja Kokko) Chapter 14. Electronic emotions, age and the life course (Jane Vincent) Chapter 15. Conclusions (Chris Gilleard, Terhi-Anna Wilska and Sakari Taipale)

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