This chapter analyzes what happens to media use when everyday life is suddenly disrupted, focusing on how the COVID-19 pandemic transformed work, socializing, communication and everyday living. The empirical case is changing media use in Norway during the pandemic, building on a qualitative questionnaire survey conducted in early lockdown, and follow-up interviews eight months later. Expanding on the ideas of destabilization of media repertoires developed in the former chapter, this analysis discusses transforming media repertoires as more digital, as less mobile (but still smartphone-centric) and as essentially social. The chapter further explains new concepts for pandemic media use practices, such as doomscrolling and Zoom fatigue.
CITATION STYLE
Ytre-Arne, B. (2023). Media Use in Disrupted Everyday Life. In Media Use in Digital Everyday Life (pp. 51–68). Emerald Publishing Limited. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80262-383-320231004
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