Embodied crises: cultural narratives, online social networks, and the mirror syndrome

Authors

  • Pablo Valdivia Universidad de Groningen
  • Rosmery-Ann Boegeholz University of Groningen / Austral University of Chile
  • Marc Esteve del Valle University of Groningen

Abstract

This article addresses three interrelated phenomena: the irruption of new cultural narratives of power, the role of online social networks in the creation of embodied crises, and the emergence of the Mirror Syndrome as a new computer-mediated medical challenge. In doing so, it exposes the negative consequences that the cultural narratives of beauty canons executed by social media have, above all, for young women’s health.

 

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Published

2021-12-31

How to Cite

Valdivia, P., Boegeholz, R.-A., & Esteve del Valle, M. (2021). Embodied crises: cultural narratives, online social networks, and the mirror syndrome. IC Revista Científica De Información Y Comunicación, (18), 37-55. Retrieved from https://icjournal-ojs.org/index.php/IC-Journal/article/view/643