‘An Everyday Story of Country Folk’ Online? The Marginalisation of the Internet and Social Media in The Archers
ISBN: 978-1-78743-286-4, eISBN: 978-1-78743-285-7
Publication date: 5 October 2017
Abstract
In this chapter, we explore to what extent storylines about the internet and social media are absent or marginal in The Archers. In particular, we examine these storylines to better understand how the inhabitants of Ambridge interact online and how their online activities intersect with their real-world experiences. We compare what happens in The Archers with the moral panic that often characterises narratives of technology use and find a striking contrast that we argue supports a broader way of understanding and characterising practices of online safety and security. We analysed four social media-related Archers’ storylines from the last 24 months. Our analysis shows that The Archers storylines enable us to look at human–computer interaction in relief so that instead of only looking at how people use technology we can also see the context in which it is used and the usually unseen support structures. The Archers narratives also provide a rich picture of how the fixed space of the physical world interacts with virtual space. In the broader context, the social media storylines provide us with an understanding of how connecting, care receiving and care giving take place in both fixed space and virtual space, and how these co-connected relationships of care receiving and care giving contribute to a form of security more expansive than technologically enabled data protection.
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Acknowledgements
Acknowledgements
Lizzie Coles-Kemp’s contribution was funded by EPSRC grant: ESSfES: Everyday Safety-Security for Everyday Services (grant number EP/N02561X/1).
Citation
Coles-Kemp, L. and Ashenden, D. (2017), "‘An Everyday Story of Country Folk’ Online? The Marginalisation of the Internet and Social Media in
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2017 Emerald Publishing Limited