Nano-Media and Connected Homeliness

Authors

  • Mojca Pajnik Department of Communication, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana

Keywords:

home, digital networks, transnational migration, communication diary

Abstract

This article explores how digital communication platforms influence the everyday life of migrants in transnational milieus and how they shape the migrants’ sense of home. I analyze the role of ICTs in forming relationships that are reproduced transnationally. The research is based on empirical material in the form of communication diaries that were completed by migrants living in Slovenia and interviews conducted with them. The article discusses the digitalized web of relations by exploring the who, when, how, where, and what of communication and analyzes how this influences the experiencing of home. The aim is to not only learn about belonging in contemporary mobility but understand how transnational communication is clustered along gender, ethnic, and class divides.

Author Biography

Mojca Pajnik, Department of Communication, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana

Mojca Pajnik is lecturer at the Department of Communication, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana and senior research associate at the Peace Institute in Ljubljana, Slovenia. She has co-edited Alternative media and the Politics of Resistance: Perspectives and Challanges (2008, with J. D. H. Downing) and is currently co-editing for Palgrave Contesting Integration, Engendering Migration: Theory and Practice (with F. Anthias, forthcoming in 2014). Phone: 0038612347720

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Published

2015-03-16

Issue

Section

Articles