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Digital harm and addiction: An anthropological view

Theodora Sutton

2020Anthropology Today51 citationsDOI

Abstract

A broad trend of anti‐tech rhetoric has raised fears about the dangers of digital overuse and reliance and suggests that technology is addictive, unnatural or harmful. Some people have limited their hours of ‘screen time’ or resorted to the practice of ‘digital detoxing’ – a catch‐all term to describe temporarily ‘leaving’ the digital world. Using her ethnographic work in a North American digital detox retreat, the author considers an anthropological approach to digital harm and addiction that emphasizes their socially constructed nature. Following Horst and Miller (2012) and the view that digital harms are socially constructed, she argues that digital technology will be removed in different places for different reasons, and that geographically bound cultural values are vital to understanding how digital harms come to be imagined and counteracted. Whether or not digital use will ever be proven to be clinically harmful, digital harm is best viewed as a ‘social fact’.

Topics & Concepts

HarmEthnographyMillerSociologyAddictionRhetoricEnvironmental ethicsAestheticsInternet privacyPsychologySocial psychologyAnthropologyComputer scienceArtEcologyPhilosophyNeuroscienceLinguisticsBiologyInnovative Human-Technology InteractionPrivacy, Security, and Data ProtectionCybernetics and Technology in Society
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