Abstract
This article explores the meaning of political unfriending and proposes the concept of the personal public sphere. Interviews with Jewish Israeli Facebook users who unfriended during the Israel–Gaza conflict of 2014 show unfriending to be a form of boundary management for the self in conditions of networked sociality. They shed light on deeply rooted perceptions of the “networkedness” of society as a fundamental organizing principle for the self and collective. Thus, we conceptualize unfriending as exercising sovereignty over one’s personal public sphere while also acknowledging that everyone else has their own personal public sphere too. The concept of the personal public sphere accounts for a crucial feature of politically motivated unfriending: the dissonance between the justifications for unfriending and the act itself.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 2971-2988 |
Number of pages | 18 |
Journal | International Journal of Communication |
Volume | 12 |
State | Published - 2018 |
Externally published | Yes |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2018 (Nicholas A. John and Noam Gal). Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial No Derivatives (by-nc-nd). Available at http://ijoc.org.
Keywords
- defriending
- disconnection
- personal public sphere
- political conversation
- social media
- unfriending