2020
DOI: 10.1111/etho.12294
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Scrolling and the In‐Between Spaces of Boredom: Marginalized Youths on the Periphery of Vienna

Abstract: Popular narratives on digital media practices are often entrenched in psychologized and apolitical frameworks that ascribe simplistic labels of addiction and deficiencies to digital practices of marginalized youths in particular. This paper explores ethnographically the social complexities behind polemicized, mundane, and apparently meaningless digital practices such as scrolling through social‐media feeds. The author links elements of interfaces designed to grab attention, erase effort, and enable flow, with … Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
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“…The following are the titles of the reports of included studies as seen in Table 3: "Impacts of Low Self-control and Opportunity Structure on Cyberbullying Developmental Trajectories: Using a Latent Class Growth Analysis" (Cho and Glassner 2021); "Scrolling and the In-Between Spaces of Boredom: Marginalized Youths on the Periphery of Vienna" (Jovicic 2020); "Cyberbullying Victimization and Perpetration in South Korean Youth: Structural Equation Modeling and Latent Means Analysis" (Kim and Lee 2023); "Predictors for runaway behavior in adolescents in South Korea: national data from a comprehensive survey of adolescents" (Kim and Moon 2023); "Associations Between Parental Maltreatment and Online Behavior Among Young Adolescents" (Kim and Han 2021 A reason these publications did not return in the scoping review of "children, empowerment, smartphones" may have been that the focus of the 4 February 2024 limited Google Scholar search was not empowerment. Google Scholar was not searched as part of the scoping review because it has been evaluated as inappropriate as a principal database since the publication of influential 2020 research in this regard (Gusenbauer and Haddaway 2020).…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The following are the titles of the reports of included studies as seen in Table 3: "Impacts of Low Self-control and Opportunity Structure on Cyberbullying Developmental Trajectories: Using a Latent Class Growth Analysis" (Cho and Glassner 2021); "Scrolling and the In-Between Spaces of Boredom: Marginalized Youths on the Periphery of Vienna" (Jovicic 2020); "Cyberbullying Victimization and Perpetration in South Korean Youth: Structural Equation Modeling and Latent Means Analysis" (Kim and Lee 2023); "Predictors for runaway behavior in adolescents in South Korea: national data from a comprehensive survey of adolescents" (Kim and Moon 2023); "Associations Between Parental Maltreatment and Online Behavior Among Young Adolescents" (Kim and Han 2021 A reason these publications did not return in the scoping review of "children, empowerment, smartphones" may have been that the focus of the 4 February 2024 limited Google Scholar search was not empowerment. Google Scholar was not searched as part of the scoping review because it has been evaluated as inappropriate as a principal database since the publication of influential 2020 research in this regard (Gusenbauer and Haddaway 2020).…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first is that, of the 11 returns, five are concerning South Korea (Cho and Glassner 2021;Kim and Lee 2023;Kim and Moon 2023;Son et al 2021), two are regarding India (Korde and Raghavan 2023;Mohan and Mahanta 2022), and one focuses on Malaysia (Yoga Ratnam et al 2022)-all Eastern democracies. There are only three reports concerning Western democracies: one considering Austria (Jovicic 2020), another focused on the United States (Ramirez 2022), and the third concerning Australia (Whitten et al 2024). This is relevant to note because these particular Eastern democracies have a 'collectivisthierarchical' culture while the Western democracies are represented by 'individualisticegalitarian' culture (Choo et al 2023;Steffensmeier et al 2019;Steffensmeier et al 2020;You 2023).…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Following the "non-digital-centric" (Pink et al, 2016, p. 9) approach to ethnographic study of digital phenomena, I adopted a holistic perspective and embedded youths' practices on and around the smartphone into a larger social, cultural, and political context. Here, "hanging out" online and offline soon turned political, as extended scrolling on the smartphone appeared embedded in the chronic boredom and unemployment of youths struggling to find work and apprenticeships, as the themes of poverty and inequality soon emerged prominently in the ethnographic conversations about issues that many of my interlocutors faced daily (Jovicic, 2020a;Jovicic et al, 2019).…”
Section: Smartphones and The Youth Centersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the 2010s, a popular technology criticism was that social media platforms were persuasive by design, enabling internet addiction or compulsive use of digital media technologies (Alter 2017;Lanier 2018;Newport 2019) and preyed upon psychological weaknesses of end users that were originally identified and exploited by the gambling industry (see Schu ¨ll 2012). Scholars contend persuasive technologies further blur the boundary between the technological and human (Dorrestijn and Verbeek 2013;Verbeek 2009Verbeek , 2011, reinforce the power of platform technologies (Stark 2018;Yeung 2017), are emblematic of wider institutional "traps" in society (Seaver 2019) and are complicit in the construction of mundane user digital practices (Jovicic 2020).…”
Section: The Mobilization Of the End Usermentioning
confidence: 99%