Journal article
Posthumous personhood and the affordances of digital media
J Meese, B Nansen, T Kohn, M Arnold, M Gibbs
Mortality | Taylor and Francis | Published : 2015
Abstract
This article identifies and outlines some of the more prominent ways that digital media can extend one’s personhood following death. We consider three examples: when the digital persona of the deceased continues to interact with the living through a human surrogate; the emergence of autonomous and semi-autonomous software enabling the dead to use social media to intervene in current events; and finally the operation of algorithmic presence services like Eterni.me, where artificial intelligence creates a re-enlivened form of the deceased. Situating these examples in relation to sociological, anthropological and cultural literature foundational to ideas of distributed personhood and posthumous..
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Grants
Awarded by Australian Research Council