The Mourning After: A Case Study of Social Media in the 3.11 Earthquake Disaster in Japan

被引:41
|
作者
Hjorth, Larissa [1 ]
Kim, Kyoung-hwa Yonnie [2 ]
机构
[1] RMIT Univ, Sch Media & Commun, Melbourne, Vic, Australia
[2] Univ Tokyo, Grad Sch Interdisciplinary Informat Studies, Tokyo 1138654, Japan
关键词
mobile media; social media; crisis; grief; Japan; affective media;
D O I
10.1177/1527476411418351
中图分类号
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号
05 ; 0503 ;
摘要
In news media of late, much has been touted about the agency of social and mobile media in the events of political uprising or at times of natural disasters and crisis management. While these events did not become events because of social media, the media did affect how we experienced the situation. This leads us to ask, Just how helpful are social mobile media in maintaining relationships in times of crisis management, and how, if at all, do they depart from previous media and methods? Drawing from case studies conducted with participants living in Tokyo at the time of the horrific events surrounding Japan's earthquake and tsunami disaster of March 11, 2011 (called 3.11), this article reflects on the role of new media in helping, if at all, people manage crisis and grief. The authors argue that while social media provide new channels for affective cultures in the form of mobile intimacy, they also extend on earlier media practices and rituals such as the postcard.
引用
收藏
页码:552 / 559
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Good grief: the role of social mobile media in the 3.11 earthquake disaster in Japan
    Hjorth, Larissa
    Kim, Kyoung-Hwa Yonnie
    DIGITAL CREATIVITY, 2011, 22 (03) : 187 - 199
  • [2] SOCIAL CAPITAL AND INSOMNIA: AFTER THE 3.11 EARTHQUAKE AND TSUNAMI IN JAPAN
    Tsuboya, T.
    Watanabe, T.
    Tsugawa, Y.
    Kawachi, I.
    Tsuji, I.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2012, 175 : S83 - S83
  • [3] What does it mean to conduct ethical research after disasters? A case study of the 3.11 disaster in Japan
    Abeysinghe, Sudeepa
    Honda, Kaori
    Leppold, Claire
    Lloyd Williams, Allison
    Ozaki, Akihiko
    Goto, Aya
    DISASTERS, 2025, 49 (02)
  • [4] A Comparative Study on Meaning and Vocabulary Distribution in Chinese and Japanese Disaster Poetry: Focusing on Disaster Poetry after the 5.12 Great Sichuan Earthquake and the 3.11 Great East Japan Earthquake
    Youngmin, Kim
    Gahyung, Choi
    Nie Zhenzhao
    INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES OF LITERATURE, 2019, 3 (02): : 240 - 256
  • [5] Psychiatric Outpatients After the 3.11 Complex Disaster in Fukushima, Japan
    Hori, Arinobu
    Hoshino, Hiroshi
    Miura, Itaru
    Hisamura, Masaki
    Wada, Akira
    Itagaki, Shuntaro
    Kunii, Yasuto
    Matsumoto, Junya
    Mashiko, Hirobumi
    Katz, Craig L.
    Yabe, Hirooki
    Niwa, Shin-Ichi
    ANNALS OF GLOBAL HEALTH, 2016, 82 (05): : 798 - 805
  • [6] Disaster and relief: The 3.11 Tohoku and Fukushima disasters and Japan's media industries
    Furukawa, Hiroko
    Denison, Rayna
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CULTURAL STUDIES, 2015, 18 (02) : 225 - 241
  • [7] Disaster Museums in Japan: Telling the Stories of Disasters Before and After 3.11
    Maly, Elizabeth
    Yamazaki, Mariko
    JOURNAL OF DISASTER RESEARCH, 2021, 16 (02) : 146 - 156
  • [8] Post-displacement placemaking to reconnect social capital after the 3.11 earthquake and tsunami in Arahama, Japan
    Ghezelloo, Yegane
    Hara, Ryuta
    Okuba, Miku
    Maly, Elizabeth
    Arai, Nobuyuki
    Kondo, Tamiyo
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION, 2024, 103
  • [9] Social Media, Information and Political Activism in Japan's 3.11 Crisis
    Slater, David H.
    Keiko, Nishimura
    Kindstrand, Love
    ASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL-JAPAN FOCUS, 2012, 10 (24):
  • [10] 3.11 case study of VGI (Volunteered geographic information) support for the great East Japan earthquake recovery
    Seki, H. (hal@georepublic.co.jp), 1600, Institute of Electronics Information and Communication Eng., Annex 3F, 5-22, Shibakoen 3 chome, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 105-0011, Japan (96):