TY - JOUR
T1 - Imperfect strangers
T2 - picturing place, family, and migrant identity on Facebook
AU - Aguirre, Alwin C.
AU - Davies, Sharyn Graham
PY - 2015/3
Y1 - 2015/3
N2 - Places have meanings and significances beyond mere location or functionality. This assertion becomes especially salient for migrants, whose status is defined by a physical move from one place to another. The aim of this paper is to discuss the practice of place-making by migrants, with specific focus on the role of Facebook in this endeavour. We present the particular case of Amy, a Filipina immigrant to New Zealand, and her Facebook activities. Central to the discussion is a four-minute audio-visual piece that she produced herself and posted online to commemorate her family's second year as New Zealanders. Guided by the framework of multimodality, the concept of place, and the practice of everyday photography, and with invaluable insights from a semi-structured interview of the participant, we illustrate how semiotic resources afforded by social media sites such as Facebook foster the construction of the discourse of the good life and a claim to national belonging. Our analysis shows that everyday family photography, in interaction with social media, potentially signifies migrants' becoming a natural part of the national landscape. By interrogating the boundaries of private and public spaces, and reproducing the "migrant gaze" in everyday family photography, Amy transforms images into unified strands of the ideal immigrant narrative.
AB - Places have meanings and significances beyond mere location or functionality. This assertion becomes especially salient for migrants, whose status is defined by a physical move from one place to another. The aim of this paper is to discuss the practice of place-making by migrants, with specific focus on the role of Facebook in this endeavour. We present the particular case of Amy, a Filipina immigrant to New Zealand, and her Facebook activities. Central to the discussion is a four-minute audio-visual piece that she produced herself and posted online to commemorate her family's second year as New Zealanders. Guided by the framework of multimodality, the concept of place, and the practice of everyday photography, and with invaluable insights from a semi-structured interview of the participant, we illustrate how semiotic resources afforded by social media sites such as Facebook foster the construction of the discourse of the good life and a claim to national belonging. Our analysis shows that everyday family photography, in interaction with social media, potentially signifies migrants' becoming a natural part of the national landscape. By interrogating the boundaries of private and public spaces, and reproducing the "migrant gaze" in everyday family photography, Amy transforms images into unified strands of the ideal immigrant narrative.
KW - Facebook
KW - Filipino diaspora
KW - Migrant gaze
KW - Migrant identity
KW - Multimodality
KW - Place-making
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84920105829&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.dcm.2014.12.001
DO - 10.1016/j.dcm.2014.12.001
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84920105829
SN - 2211-6958
VL - 7
SP - 3
EP - 17
JO - Discourse, Context & Media
JF - Discourse, Context & Media
ER -