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Digital ties, disrupted togetherness: locating uneven communicative mobilities in transnational family life

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journal contribution
posted on 2019-01-01, 00:00 authored by Earvin Cabalquinto
Ubiquitous digital communication technologies play a crucial role in shaping the nature of family life at a distance. Paradoxically, mobile device use has not only brought dispersed family members together, it also sometimes stirs communicative tensions in transnational households. These tensions are often produced by uneven access to a wide range of re-sources in mediated communication. Employing the mobilities lens, this paper examines the role of smartphones and networked communications platforms in binding ties and relationships among twenty-one overseas Filipino workers in Melbourne, Australia, and their left-behind family members in the Philippines. Based on data drawn from in-depth interviews and photo elicitation, the research study uncovers the performance, embodiment, and negotiation of transnational relationships through mobile device use. Signifcantly, it also demonstrates the impact of structural and infrastructural forces in enabling differential mediated mobilities. In illuminating asymmetrical mobile communication, I propose six categories: access, socio-technical competency, quality of connectivity, rhythms, affective experience, and communicative space. Ultimately, this paper offers a critical lens on investigating mobile practices in the conduct of transnational family life.

History

Journal

Migration, mobility, & displacement

Volume

4

Issue

1

Season

Spring

Pagination

49 - 63

Publisher

The Centre for Asia-Pacific Initiatives, University of Victoria

Location

Victoria, BC

eISSN

2369-288X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2019, Earvin Charles Cabalquinto

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