Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) B. Robards , Siân Lincoln
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) University of Tasmania, Liverpool John Moores University, UK
ANO 2016
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Social Media + Society
ISSN 2056-3051
E-ISSN 2056-3051
DOI 10.1177/2056305116672890
CITAÇÕES 5
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 5365dfacd38d574148996467216f1c64

Resumo

For the past 12 years, Facebook has played a significant role in mediating the lives of its users. Disclosures on the site go on to serve as intimate, co-constructed life records, albeit with unique and always-evolving affordances. The ways in which romantic relationships are mediated on the site are complex and contested: 'What is the significance of articulating a romantic relationship on Facebook?' 'Why do some choose to make socially and culturally critical moments like the beginning and ends of relationships visible on Facebook, whereas others (perhaps within the same relationship) do not?' 'How do these practices change over time?' and 'When is it time to go 'Facebook official'?' In this article, we draw on qualitative research with Facebook users in their 20s in Australia and the United Kingdom who have been using the site for 5 years or more. Interviews with participants revealed that romantic relationships were central to many of their growing up narratives, and in this article, we draw out examples to discuss four kinds of (non-exclusive) practices: (1) overt relationship status disclosures, mediated through the 'relationship status' affordance of the site, (2) implied relationship disclosures, mediated through an increase in images and tags featuring romantic partners, (3) the intended absence of relationship visibility, and (4) later-erased or revised relationship disclosures. We also critique the ways in which Facebook might work to produce normative 'relationship traces,' privileging neat linearity, monogamy, and obfuscating (perhaps usefully, perhaps not) the messy complexity of romantic relationships.

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