|
|
---
|
|
|
title: \<?water bodies\>
|
|
|
author: Ada
|
|
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
|
|
# <?water bodies>
|
|
|
|
|
|
### A narrative exploration of divergent digital intimacies
|
|
|
|
|
|
Water, stories, the body,
|
|
|
all the things we do, are
|
|
|
mediums
|
|
|
that hide and show what’s
|
|
|
hidden.
|
|
|
(Rumi, 1995 translation)
|
|
|
|
|
|
## ꙳for you
|
|
|
|
|
|
All intimacy is about bodies.
|
|
|
Is this true? Does it matter? I doubt it. Do you know?
|
|
|
Let’s find out, maybe.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Once, I thought that everything in the world was either
|
|
|
one or zero and that there was a harsh straight line
|
|
|
between them. Then I found out you could step or hop
|
|
|
across the line, back and forth, if others showed you
|
|
|
how. Today, I am no less binary, no less interested in
|
|
|
dichotomies, but I am willing to dance through them if
|
|
|
you are too. Can we dance these dichotomies together,
|
|
|
embracing the contradictions of the virtual and
|
|
|
physical, the comfortable and uncomfortable, intimate
|
|
|
and non-intimate? I can’t do it alone, the subject is too
|
|
|
heavy and the binary is too 1011000. I won’t ask you
|
|
|
to resolve these contradictions, I have no desire to.
|
|
|
Instead, I hope we can cultivate the tension and
|
|
|
tenderness inherent in holding together incompatible
|
|
|
truths because both prove necessary.
|
|
|
|
|
|
To dance through these dichotomies I will start in a
|
|
|
specific position, growing from Donna Haraway’s in ‘A
|
|
|
Cyborg Manifesto”. In her essay, Haraway explores the
|
|
|
concept of a cyborg as a rejection of boundaries
|
|
|
between humans, animals, and machines. A symbol for
|
|
|
a feminist posthuman theory that embraces the
|
|
|
plasticity of identity. Before she does all this dancing,
|
|
|
however, she takes a strong stance of blasphemy. She
|
|
|
engages seriously with traditional notions of feminism
|
|
|
and identity but with irony, not apostasy, which is to say without full rejection—without unbelief.
|
|
|
My position as I jump will be the same as hers, ironic
|
|
|
faith. My mocking is grave but caring and my primary
|
|
|
aim is for us only to spin fast enough not to see the line
|
|
|
anymore, while still being able to see the binaries. It
|
|
|
won’t be an easy dance for us but I will do my best to
|
|
|
keep softening for you, I promise.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I will show you a digital body, make it comfortable and
|
|
|
then uncomfortable, lightly intimate, and richly
|
|
|
intimate. I have my own story, my own digital body, of
|
|
|
course. This is where I take my second stance,
|
|
|
however. This time, the position is Lauren Berlant’s,
|
|
|
from ‘The Female Complaint’. The book places
|
|
|
individual stories as inescapable autobiographies of a
|
|
|
collective experience and uses the personal to explain
|
|
|
an intimate general experience. In our story, the
|
|
|
difference between my body and the collective digital
|
|
|
body is unimportant, I hope you see that. I will tell you
|
|
|
my story if you know how to look, but I will tell you
|
|
|
through the stories of many others who shared them
|
|
|
with me. I have no other choice, every time I have tried
|
|
|
to tell this story a chorus of voices has come out.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Some of the stories I will tell you will carry memories
|
|
|
of pain; physical and emotional. I will keep holding you
|
|
|
while you hear this, but your limbs may still feel too
|
|
|
heavy to dance. In that case, I give you my full
|
|
|
permission to skip, jump, or lay down completely. This
|
|
|
is not choreographed and I care deeply for you.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I love you and hope you see what I saw in these stories.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Safe dreams now, I will talk to you soon.
|
|
|
|
|
|
## 0. DIGITAL BODIES
|
|
|
|
|
|
I think the worst must be finished.
|
|
|
Whether I am right, don’t tell me.
|
|
|
Don’t tell me.
|
|
|
No ringlet of bruise,
|
|
|
no animal face, the waters salt me
|
|
|
and I leave it barefoot. I leave you, season
|
|
|
of still tongues, of roses on nightstands
|
|
|
beside crushed beer cans. I leave you
|
|
|
white sand and scraped knees. I leave
|
|
|
this myth in which I am pig, whose
|
|
|
death is empty allegory. I leave, I leave—
|
|
|
At the end of this story,
|
|
|
I walk into the sea
|
|
|
and it chooses
|
|
|
not to drown me.
|
|
|
(Yun, 2020)
|
|
|
|
|
|
### a. what is a digital body?
|
|
|
|
|
|
A digital body is a body on the Internet.
|
|
|
A body outside the internet is simply a body. On the
|
|
|
internet, discussions about corporeality transcend the
|
|
|
limitations of physicality, shaping and reshaping
|
|
|
narratives surrounding the self. This text explores the
|
|
|
intricate dynamics within these conversations, dancing
|
|
|
at the interplay between tangible bodies and their
|
|
|
digital counterparts. The construction of a digital body
|
|
|
is intricately intertwined with these online dialogues,
|
|
|
necessitating engaged reconstructions of the narratives
|
|
|
surrounding physical existence. Yet, the resulting
|
|
|
digital body is a complex and contradictory entity,
|
|
|
embodying the nuances of both its virtual and tangible
|
|
|
origins.
|
|
|
|
|
|
There is a specific metaphor that would allow us to
|
|
|
better carry these contradictions as we further explore
|
|
|
digital bodies. Do you remember that dream you had
|
|
|
about deep ocean pie? Allow me to remind you.
|
|
|
|
|
|
You were walking on the shore, slowly, during a
|
|
|
summer that happened a long time ago. Your skin was
|
|
|
warm and you could feel the wet cool sand sticking to
|
|
|
your feet. The gentle lapping of the waves washed the
|
|
|
sand away as you walked towards the ocean. You
|
|
|
stepped, stepped. Then dove. Underwater, the sea
|
|
|
unfolded deeper than you remembered. It was a
|
|
|
vibrant display of life: bright schools of small fish, and
|
|
|
tall colorful, waving corals. It looked like that
|
|
|
aquarium you saw once as a kid. Your arms moved
|
|
|
confusingly through the water as if you were wading through a soup or were terribly tired. On the sandy
|
|
|
ocean floor, you saw a dining table.
|
|
|
It had a floating white tablecloth, one plate, a fork, and
|
|
|
a pie in the center of it, on a serving dish. You sat on a
|
|
|
chair but could not feel it underneath you. You ate a
|
|
|
heaping slice of pie. It had a buttery-cooked carrots
|
|
|
filling. You woke up.
|
|
|
In the world, the sun was still timid and your bedroom
|
|
|
thick with sleep. What a weird dream. You rubbed your
|
|
|
face, sat up on your bed, and drank the glass of water
|
|
|
next to you. You felt full, as if you just ate a plateful of
|
|
|
carrot pie.
|
|
|
|
|
|
There were two bodies in this story. An awake one and
|
|
|
a dream one, an ocean one. In dreams, bodies have
|
|
|
their own set of rules, often blurring the boundaries
|
|
|
between waking and sleeping, wanting and fearing.
|
|
|
Digital bodies are very similar to dream bodies. They
|
|
|
exhibit a similar fluidity and abstraction, a defiance of
|
|
|
traditional notions of physicality. They share the
|
|
|
blurring and inherent potential nature of dream bodies.
|
|
|
They are slower, stronger, and different. They switch
|
|
|
and change and melt into each other, they lose and
|
|
|
regrow limbs, they run sluggishly and fly smoothly. If
|
|
|
we scream in our dreams, we sometimes wake up still
|
|
|
screaming. Our waking bodies react to our dream
|
|
|
bodies, they have the same tears, the same orgasms,
|
|
|
the same drives.
|
|
|
|
|
|
This is a story of two bodies, same but different,
|
|
|
influenced but not driven.
|
|
|
A tangible body, full of fluids and organs, emotions and
|
|
|
feelings. Cartilage, bacteria, bones, and nerve
|
|
|
endings. A digital body, cable-veined and loud-vented,
|
|
|
shiny and loading.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The digital body is ethereal and abstracted,
|
|
|
embarrassing, graphic, and real but not physical.
|
|
|
|
|
|
This is the beginning.
|
|
|
|
|
|
### b. body vs. computer
|
|
|
|
|
|
Framing the discourse around bodies on the internet as
|
|
|
a clear-cut dichotomy feels clunky in today’s internet
|
|
|
landscape. The web is today available by body, cyborg
|
|
|
dimensions of the internet of bodies, or virtual and
|
|
|
augmented realities, creating a complex interplay
|
|
|
between having a body and existing online.
|
|
|
|
|
|
As intricate as this dance is now, it certainly did not
|
|
|
begin that way. It started with what felt like a very
|
|
|
serious and tangible line drawn by very serious
|
|
|
tangible people; this is real life and this is virtual life.
|
|
|
Even people like Howard Rheingold, pioneers who
|
|
|
approached early virtual life with enthusiasm and care,
|
|
|
couldn’t escape characterizing it as a “bloodless
|
|
|
technological ritual” (1993). Rheingold was an early
|
|
|
member of The Whole Earth ‘Lectronic Link (Well), a
|
|
|
seminal virtual community built in the 1980s that was
|
|
|
renowned for its impact on digital culture and played a
|
|
|
pivotal role in shaping what would become the
|
|
|
landscape of the Internet. Rheingold’s reflections on
|
|
|
his experience on this primordial soup of the Internet
|
|
|
offer insight into the initial conceptualizations of online
|
|
|
life by those joyfully participating.
|
|
|
|
|
|
In “The Virtual Community”, Rheingold offers a
|
|
|
heartfelt tribute to intimacy and affection through web-
|
|
|
based interactions which, at the time, were unheard of.
|
|
|
He struggles in his efforts to highlight the legitimacy of
|
|
|
his connections, finding no way to do so except by
|
|
|
emphasizing their tangible bodily experiences.
|
|
|
The community’s claim to authenticity thus had to lie in the physical experiences of its members— the visible
|
|
|
bodies and hearable voices, the weddings, births, and
|
|
|
funerals (1993).<sup><span class="margin-note"> You’re dreaming again, good. <br>Would you feel closer to me if you could hear my voice?<br> Is my voice a sound? Could it be a feeling?</span></sup>.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Even then, and even by people with no interest in
|
|
|
undermining the value of the virtual, the distinction
|
|
|
between physical and virtual was confusing. Rheingold
|
|
|
himself reinforces the boundary of body relations and
|
|
|
computer relations by referring to his family as a
|
|
|
“flesh-and-blood family’ and his close online friends as
|
|
|
“unfamiliar faces” (1993). Constantly interplaying
|
|
|
digital connections with the physical characteristics of
|
|
|
the kind of connections people valued before the
|
|
|
internet. (2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
In any case, his primary interest seemed to be to
|
|
|
emphasize computer relations as valid forms of
|
|
|
connection between bodies, not to talk of any
|
|
|
distinction quite yet. It’s the eighties, the internet is
|
|
|
still fresh and new and the possibility to form close
|
|
|
relations with strangers online seems fragile and
|
|
|
concerning yet exciting. This is the clearest the
|
|
|
distinction between in-real-life and online has ever
|
|
|
been and it’s still fuzzy and unclear.
|
|
|
|
|
|
At the same time and in the same digital space as
|
|
|
Rheingold, there was another man, a digital body being
|
|
|
formed. This is our second story, the ocean body we
|
|
|
dreamt of earlier is now in a digital primordial soup,
|
|
|
questioning itself and stuck between staying and
|
|
|
leaving. In this story, its name is Tom Mandel and
|
|
|
when he died, he did so on the Well.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mandel was a controversial and popular figure in this
|
|
|
pioneering virtual community. According to many other members,
|
|
|
Tom Mandel embodied the essence of the Well—its history,
|
|
|
its voice, its attitude. Mandel's snarky and verbose
|
|
|
provocations started heated discussions, earning him
|
|
|
warnings such as "Don't Feed The Mandel!” (Leonard, 1995).
|
|
|
His sharp comments often stirred emotions that reminded
|
|
|
people of family arguments, fuelling an intimacy that
|
|
|
was characteristic of the Well:
|
|
|
both public and solitary (Hafner, 1997).
|
|
|
|
|
|
Until 1995, Mandel had done a quite rigorous job of
|
|
|
keeping his body separate from The Well and had
|
|
|
never attended any of the physical in-person meetings
|
|
|
from the community. His only references to being a
|
|
|
body had been on the “health” online conference,
|
|
|
where he often talked about his illnesses.
|
|
|
One day, after nearly a decade of daily interaction, he
|
|
|
posted he had got the flu and that he felt quite ill.
|
|
|
When people wished for him to get well soon, he
|
|
|
replied he had gone to get tested and was waiting for a
|
|
|
diagnosis. This way, when cancer was found in his
|
|
|
lungs, the community was first to know. In the
|
|
|
following six months, as his illness progressed, the
|
|
|
community followed closely (Hafner, 1997).
|
|
|
They were first to know when Nana, a community
|
|
|
member with whom he had had a publicly turbulent
|
|
|
relationship, flew to California to marry him. The
|
|
|
community was a witness and is now an archive of his
|
|
|
declining wit as cancer spread to his brain and his
|
|
|
famously articulate and scathing comments got
|
|
|
shorter, fearful, and more tender. (3)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Before he posted his final goodbye, he chose to do one
|
|
|
last thing. Together with another member, they
|
|
|
programmed a bot that posted randomly characteristic
|
|
|
comments from Mandel on The Well—the Mandelbot.
|
|
|
In the topic he had opened to say goodbye, he posted
|
|
|
this message about the bot:
|
|
|
|
|
|
I had another motive in opening this topic to tell the
|
|
|
truth, one that winds its way through almost everything
|
|
|
I've done online in the five months since my cancer was
|
|
|
diagnosed. I figured that, like everyone else, my
|
|
|
physical self wasn't going to survive forever and I guess
|
|
|
I was going to have less time than actuarials allocateus
|
|
|
[actually allocated]. But if I could reach out and touch
|
|
|
everyone I knew on-line... I could toss out bits and
|
|
|
pieces of my virtual self and the memes that make up
|
|
|
Tom Mandel, and then when my body died, I wouldn't
|
|
|
really have to leave... Large chunks of me would also
|
|
|
be here, part of this new space.
|
|
|
(Hafner, 1997)
|
|
|
|
|
|
With the Mandelbot, Mandel found a way to deal with
|
|
|
what he later called his grieving for the community,
|
|
|
with which he could not play anymore once his own
|
|
|
body died. By doing so, he was starting to blend the
|
|
|
boundaries of intimacy through computers and bodies,
|
|
|
driven by his love and grief. (4)
|
|
|
|
|
|
When he talked about the bot in previous messages, it
|
|
|
sounded almost like a joke. A caring haunting of the
|
|
|
platform, to keep his persona alive for the community
|
|
|
in a way that could be quite horrific for those grieving.
|
|
|
In his admission though it becomes clear that this was
|
|
|
closer to an attempt to deal with his grief around losing
|
|
|
the community, his unreadiness to let go of a place he
|
|
|
loved so dearly. A place just as real in emotion, that
|
|
|
was built in part by Mandel’s digital body and its
|
|
|
persona.
|
|
|
|
|
|
In a tribute posted after his death, fellow Well member
|
|
|
and journalist Andrew Leonard tried to convey his own
|
|
|
sense of blended physicality and emotion.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sneer all you want at the fleshlessness of online
|
|
|
community, but on this night, as tears stream down my
|
|
|
face for the third straight evening, it feels all too real.
|
|
|
(Andrew Leonard, 1995)
|
|
|
|
|
|
### c. bot-feelings
|
|
|
|
|
|
An internet body has bot-feelings if allowed to. Let me
|
|
|
explain.
|
|
|
|
|
|
A bot functions as a different entity from a cyborg, as it
|
|
|
does not attempt to emulate a human body but rather
|
|
|
human action and readiness. Its role is to mirror
|
|
|
human behavior online, simulating how a physical body
|
|
|
might act, what it would click on, and what would it
|
|
|
say. On social media, bots engage in a kind of
|
|
|
interpretative dance of human interaction, performing
|
|
|
based on instructions provided by humans. (5)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Unlike an internet body, which represents the virtual
|
|
|
embodiment of a person, a bot doesn’t seek to be a
|
|
|
person. It comments under posts alongside many other
|
|
|
bots, all under a fake name and photo but nothing else
|
|
|
to give the illusion of humanity. When an internet body
|
|
|
has bot-feelings, it is a disruptive performance. They
|
|
|
are feelings that do not attempt to be human body
|
|
|
feelings, they exist as their own genuine virtual
|
|
|
expression.
|
|
|
|
|
|
In “Virtual Intimacies”, McGlotten also incidentally
|
|
|
argued that a virtual body has bot-feelings (2013). He
|
|
|
described the virtual as potential, as a transcendent
|
|
|
process of actualization, making it into, generally, a
|
|
|
description of bots. Internet bodies, as virtual, would
|
|
|
be by this understanding also charged with the
|
|
|
constant immanent power to act and to feel like a
|
|
|
human body. It is a constant state of becoming, of not-
|
|
|
quite-pretending but never fully being anything either.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Most of the time we can tell disembodied bots online
|
|
|
from tangible people and as such they have the
|
|
|
potential to be bodies, without ever trying to be.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Of course, when McGlotten described the virtual as
|
|
|
such he placed it in a dichotomy, once again, against
|
|
|
the “Intimacies” which are the other side of his book.
|
|
|
The emphasis here lies in intimacy being an embodied
|
|
|
feeling and sense and a carnal one at that. Virtual
|
|
|
intimacies are, by this definition, an inherent failed
|
|
|
contradiction. However, McGlotten plays with the real
|
|
|
and non-real in new ways, using the text to highlight
|
|
|
how virtual intimacy is similar to physical intimacy and
|
|
|
then, even more, blurring as he shows the already
|
|
|
virtual in physical intimacies. Applying this to a body,
|
|
|
rather than an affective experience, works just the
|
|
|
same.
|
|
|
|
|
|
McGlotten uses a conceptualization of the virtual
|
|
|
based on the philosopher Deleuze’s, (6) which can be
|
|
|
used to refer to a virtual body as well.
|
|
|
The virtual is in this case a cluster of waiting,
|
|
|
dreaming, and remembering, embodying potential.
|
|
|
Something that is constantly becoming, an object and
|
|
|
also the subject attributed to it (2001). An internet
|
|
|
body with its bot-feelings is a body in the process of
|
|
|
being one, acting as one, an ideal of one beyond what
|
|
|
is physical but including its possibility.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Going a step further in McGlotten’s interpretation of
|
|
|
Deleuze, this also plays into how virtual intimacies
|
|
|
mirror queer intimacies as they approach normative
|
|
|
ideals but “can never arrive at them”. Both queer and
|
|
|
virtual relations are imagined by a greater narrative as
|
|
|
fantastical, simulated, immaterial, and artificial—poor
|
|
|
imitations and perversions of a heterosexual,
|
|
|
monogamous, and procreative marital partnership
|
|
|
(2013). A virtual body is similarly immanent, with both
|
|
|
potential and corruption at the same time. It carries all
|
|
|
the neoliberal normative power of freedom that a
|
|
|
queer body can carry today but also reflects the
|
|
|
unseemly fleshly reality of having one.
|
|
|
|
|
|
This is where the story continues. The body from the
|
|
|
dream ocean leaves the primordial soup of the internet
|
|
|
to stage a disruptive performance.
|
|
|
It moves from potential creation to a wild spring river.
|
|
|
A fluid being, that exists simultaneously inside and
|
|
|
outside normative constructions. It channels deviant
|
|
|
feelings and transcendental opinions about the
|
|
|
collective’s physical form genuinely as people use it to
|
|
|
navigate their physicality.
|
|
|
Both virtual and queer intimacies highlight the
|
|
|
constructed nature of identity and desire. They disrupt
|
|
|
the notion of a fixed, essential self, instead embracing
|
|
|
the multiplicity and complexity inherent in human
|
|
|
experience. This destabilization of identity opens up
|
|
|
possibilities for self-expression and connection,
|
|
|
creating spaces where individuals can redefine
|
|
|
themselves beyond the constraints of societal
|
|
|
expectations while still technically under its watchful
|
|
|
eye.
|
|
|
In essence, the parallels between virtual and queer
|
|
|
intimacies underscore the radical potential of both to
|
|
|
disrupt and reimagine the norms that govern our
|
|
|
understanding of relationships, bodies, and identity.
|
|
|
They invite us to question the rigid binaries and
|
|
|
hierarchies that structure our society and to embrace
|
|
|
the fluidity and possibility inherent in the human
|
|
|
experience.
|
|
|
|
|
|
## 1.DIGITAL COMFORT
|
|
|
|
|
|
The only laws:
|
|
|
Be radiant.
|
|
|
Be heavy.
|
|
|
Be green.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tonight, the dead light up your mind
|
|
|
like an image of your mind on a scientist’s screen.
|
|
|
‘The scientists don’t know – and too much.’
|
|
|
|
|
|
In the town square, in the heart of night (a delicacy
|
|
|
like the heart of an artichoke), a man dances
|
|
|
cheek-to-cheek with the infinite blue.
|
|
|
(Schwartz, 2022)
|
|
|
|
|
|
### a. comfort care
|
|
|
|
|
|
Let’s care for this digital body.
|
|
|
I’ll feed it virtual vegetables while you wipe away the
|
|
|
wear of battery fatigue.
|
|
|
And why not encourage it to take strolls through the
|
|
|
network, it might be good for it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
But what if it falls ill?
|
|
|
What if its sickness is inherent, designed to echo like
|
|
|
the distorted reflection of rippling water a corrupted,
|
|
|
isolated, and repulsive physical form?
|
|
|
Then we must comfort care for it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Comfort care is a key concept in healthcare, described
|
|
|
as an art. It is the simple but not easy art of
|
|
|
performing comforting actions by a nurse for a patient
|
|
|
(Kolcaba, 1995). The nurse is in this story an artist full
|
|
|
of intention, using the medium of comforting actions to
|
|
|
produce the artwork of comfort for the uncomfortable.
|
|
|
Subtle, subjective, and thorough. However, achieving
|
|
|
comfort for another is far from straightforward. It
|
|
|
demands addressing not only the physical but also the
|
|
|
psychospiritual, environmental, and socio-cultural
|
|
|
dimensions of distress, each requiring its blend of
|
|
|
relief, ease, and transcendence (Kolcaba, 1995).
|
|
|
|
|
|
In moments of need, digital comfort may become the
|
|
|
only care certain digressive bodies receive. When the
|
|
|
distress a body is in becomes too culturally
|
|
|
uncomfortable, no nurse will come to check on it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
If care is offered, it's often only with a desire to
|
|
|
assimilate the divergent body back into expected
|
|
|
standards of normalcy and ability. This leaves those
|
|
|
with non-conforming bodies isolated, ashamed, and
|
|
|
yearning for connection and acceptance (7)
|
|
|
|
|
|
In the depths of isolation and confusion, marginalized
|
|
|
bodies often look for belonging and understanding
|
|
|
online. Gravitating towards one another with a hunger
|
|
|
born of desperation, forming intimate bonds through
|
|
|
shared pain. Through a shared sense of unwillingness,
|
|
|
a lack of desire, and a desperate need for physical
|
|
|
assimilation with the norm.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The healthy body, the normal body, the loved body.
|
|
|
|
|
|
On the internet, these digital bodies claw onto each
|
|
|
other, holding each other close and comfort-caring for
|
|
|
one another. The spaces where this happens are
|
|
|
rooms, or corners of the internet that I’ll call back
|
|
|
places. Back places were initially defined by the
|
|
|
sociologist Goffman as symbolic spaces where
|
|
|
stigmatized people did not need to hide their
|
|
|
stigma(1963). In our story, backplaces are small rooms
|
|
|
online, tender soft spaces reserved by those in terrible
|
|
|
psychological pain themselves, where they can find
|
|
|
relief, ease, and transcendence.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Of course, when we speak of digital bodies, their
|
|
|
physicality is not relevant. To comfort care for a digital
|
|
|
body one would thus need to provide relief, ease, and
|
|
|
transcendence for the mental, emotional, and spiritual;
|
|
|
through the digital environment of the body and the
|
|
|
interpersonal cultural relations of the individual.
|
|
|
As with any place of healing, however, it is a transient
|
|
|
place. It is an achy place, for the last step of the
|
|
|
journey will see them leave the community and
|
|
|
compassion that saw and sustained them.
|
|
|
|
|
|
There is no other way for divergent people.
|
|
|
|
|
|
### b. uncomfortable comfort
|
|
|
|
|
|
In the past and the present, social scientists have
|
|
|
studied the people in the corners of the internet,
|
|
|
characterizing these spaces between people as
|
|
|
deviant. Like children lifting stones to look at the bugs
|
|
|
underneath— simultaneously repulsed and fascinated
|
|
|
by the coherence discovered where once was
|
|
|
separation. A partition that was then reinforced by the
|
|
|
scientists themselves as they began documenting the
|
|
|
bugs’ behavior. They eavesdropped on conversations,
|
|
|
captured intimate moments, and asked again and again
|
|
|
what made them so different. The more they probed,
|
|
|
the more they made sure to separate their behavior
|
|
|
from the norm to place the deviants against (Adler and
|
|
|
Adler, 2005, 2008; Smith, Wickes & Underwood,
|
|
|
2013).
|
|
|
|
|
|
The concept of deviance, particularly concerning what
|
|
|
people do with their bodies and how their bodies
|
|
|
behave, I find inherently flawed. Observing from an
|
|
|
artificial external standpoint only serves to further
|
|
|
alienate those already marginalized. I like to approach
|
|
|
my research into the intimacy and comfort care
|
|
|
expressed in marginalized digital communities without
|
|
|
the alienation of social science. There are many
|
|
|
approaches one can take if one wishes to avoid this,
|
|
|
and the one I am choosing to borrow is a mathematical
|
|
|
approach to anthropology.
|
|
|
I would like to borrow from mathematician Jörn
|
|
|
Dunkel’s work in pattern formation. It’s a conscious
|
|
|
choice to approach divergences in bodily behavior
|
|
|
through their similarities, not differences. This includes
|
|
|
specificities in atypicality, of course, but also the
|
|
|
distinctions between me as the writer and them as the
|
|
|
writer. You as the reader and you as the community.
|
|
|
Me and you, as a whole. Both exist, both separate but
|
|
|
in what is not of such importance.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Though many of these systems are different,
|
|
|
fundamentally, we can see similarities in the structure
|
|
|
of their data. It’s very easy to find differences. What’s
|
|
|
more interesting is to find out what’s similar.
|
|
|
(Chu & Dunkel , 2021)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Individuals who forge and inhabit these communities,
|
|
|
fostering tender, intimate connections amongst
|
|
|
themselves, are not deviant but rather divergent.
|
|
|
Deviance involves bifurcation, a split estuary from the
|
|
|
river of appropriate cultural behavior. (8)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Divergence can be so much more than that.
|
|
|
In mathematics, a divergent series extends infinitely
|
|
|
without converging to a finite limit. A repetition of
|
|
|
partial sums with no clear ending, never reaching zero.
|
|
|
Mathematician Niels Abel once said that "divergent
|
|
|
series are in general something fatal and it is a shame
|
|
|
to base any proof on them. [..] The most essential part
|
|
|
of mathematics has no foundation”(1826). Drawing a
|
|
|
parallel to social relations would then imply that there
|
|
|
is no end to divergence, too many paradoxes in the
|
|
|
foundation of normativeness to base anything on it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Harmonic series are, on the other hand, also divergent
|
|
|
series. They are infinite series formed by the
|
|
|
summation of all positive unit fractions, named after
|
|
|
music harmonics. The wavelengths of a vibrating string
|
|
|
are a harmonic series. These series also find
|
|
|
application in architecture, establishing harmonious
|
|
|
relationships. Despite their integral role in human
|
|
|
aesthetics, all harmonic series diverge, perpetually
|
|
|
expanding without ever concluding. They embody a
|
|
|
richness that transcends conventional boundaries,
|
|
|
blending into one another infinitely.
|
|
|
|
|
|
![Figure 1 - Harmonic Series to 32 (Hyacint,2017).](../images/Harmonic-series.png)
|
|
|
|
|
|
By likening digital bodies to divergent series, we
|
|
|
embrace the complexity and infinite possibilities
|
|
|
arising from their interconnectedness and deviation
|
|
|
from the norm. However, it's crucial to note that the
|
|
|
divergence I'm discussing here carries a halo of pain,
|
|
|
accompanied by the requirement of bodily discomfort.
|
|
|
There are other forms of divergence, ways to have
|
|
|
different bodies that necessitate creating spaciousness
|
|
|
around normativity to allow them grace to grow.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The divergent digital bodies we are dancing with and
|
|
|
caring for, however, are of a particular type. If we were
|
|
|
to go back to our water stories, we’d see that the
|
|
|
digital bodies we are following are painful ones. Cold,
|
|
|
deep streams, hard to follow, hard to swim in. Their
|
|
|
divergence from the norm makes them so.
|
|
|
|
|
|
They have intricate relationships with themselves,
|
|
|
existing in unstainable forms devoid of comfort,
|
|
|
nourishment, or thriving. What does comfort mean for
|
|
|
a body whose whole existence is uncomfortable?
|
|
|
Moreover, what if the comfort care performed for
|
|
|
these divergent bodies makes them too comfortable
|
|
|
being in their pained state of self? Could they be? (9)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Caring for a digital body involves providing it with
|
|
|
space to live, giving its experimental bot-feelings
|
|
|
tender attention, and revealing your own vulnerable
|
|
|
digital body in response. It’s about giving it an
|
|
|
audience, hands to hold, eyes that meet theirs in
|
|
|
understanding. A rehearsal room, a pillow, a mirror.
|
|
|
These rooms, backplaces scattered across the internet,
|
|
|
are hidden enough to allow the divergent to comfort-
|
|
|
care for one another, sometimes to the point where it is
|
|
|
only the same type of divergent digital bodies reflecting
|
|
|
back at each other.
|
|
|
|
|
|
So far I have talked fondly of divergence and the
|
|
|
harmony of divergent series, and the need to have no
|
|
|
finite ending. I’d like to tell you a different story now.
|
|
|
Divergent digital bodies are, by this point in our text,
|
|
|
built and alive as they can be. They are many, they are
|
|
|
together and seeing each other, producing harmonic
|
|
|
waves. They are in backplaces on the internet, but they
|
|
|
are less safe than they seem. They are themselves
|
|
|
resonant echo chambers, with an ongoing risk of
|
|
|
catastrophic acoustic resonance.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Acoustic resonance is what happens when an acoustic
|
|
|
system amplifies sound waves whose frequency
|
|
|
matches one of its natural frequencies of vibration.
|
|
|
The instrument of amplification is important for the
|
|
|
harmonic series, for the music must not match exactly.
|
|
|
An exact match will break it for the object seeks out its
|
|
|
resonance. Resonating at the precise resonant
|
|
|
frequency of a glass will shatter it. Digital bodies meet
|
|
|
in these rooms, amplifying their own waves seeking
|
|
|
resonance but the risk of an exact match is that it may
|
|
|
shatter them. These spaces full of divergent digital
|
|
|
bodies quickly grow unstable, tethering echo
|
|
|
chambers. Rooms full of reflections, transforming what
|
|
|
was once individual pain into a mirrored loop of
|
|
|
anguish. Caring for your own and others’ bodies
|
|
|
becomes increasingly difficult, making permanent
|
|
|
residence in the mirror room unbearable. You all know
|
|
|
you must leave before you meet your exact resonance.
|
|
|
|
|
|
### c. unbearable intimacy
|
|
|
|
|
|
This is the end of the story.
|
|
|
Our digital bodies have a shape, a sense of life and
|
|
|
death, and someone to care for us and to care for. We
|
|
|
are alive and have found intimacy with each other.
|
|
|
|
|
|
We live in the backplaces, hiding and being hidden
|
|
|
online as we have been for years. We used to be on
|
|
|
invitation-only forums, password-protected bulletin
|
|
|
boards, or encrypted hashtags. Now we are alive in the
|
|
|
glitches between pixels, in a shared language of
|
|
|
numbers and acronyms and misdirection. Avoiding a
|
|
|
content moderation algorithm, always hunting the
|
|
|
dashboards of social media websites for visible pain it
|
|
|
can cure by erasure. We cannot tell you where to find
|
|
|
you or it might too. We try to stay alive, to hold each
|
|
|
other, hiding behind code words, fake names, and
|
|
|
photos. We care for each other as best we can, the
|
|
|
blind leading the blind, the sick caring for the sick. We
|
|
|
have brought our unseemliness, our gory gross bodies
|
|
|
to each other and found tender intimacy and
|
|
|
understanding.
|
|
|
|
|
|
On good days, dashboards are full of goodbyes and my
|
|
|
heart swells with hope, for those of us who make it and
|
|
|
for the small bright light telling us that we may be one
|
|
|
of them. At the same time, some of us leave only to
|
|
|
come back ghosts of ourselves, hunting threads with
|
|
|
the empty hope of missionaries.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Don’t give up, it’s worth it!
|
|
|
|
|
|
Most of us scoff at this. The idea of leaving only to
|
|
|
come back and tell people you left is uncomfortable,
|
|
|
the failed progress that washes away hope. A healed
|
|
|
patient who regularly comes back to the hospital to
|
|
|
encourage the sick, who wish to be anywhere but
|
|
|
there. The genuine love and care within these
|
|
|
communities transpire better under goodbye posts.
|
|
|
When people do heal and shed their accounts’ skin,
|
|
|
they often leave it surrounded by all those who once
|
|
|
cared for the digital body within it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I’m so proud of you! Never come back,
|
|
|
we love you so much.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Recover, don’t come back.
|
|
|
Recover, don’t come back.
|
|
|
Recover, never come back.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I had a conversation with a friend who once lived in
|
|
|
these spaces between letters but has since moved
|
|
|
outside them. When asked, he mentioned he could
|
|
|
only find recovery by leaving that community. His body
|
|
|
has changed since now it is the spitting image of a
|
|
|
standard, healthy body. I didn’t ask, but he knew I’d
|
|
|
wonder. He told me he didn’t like his new body and
|
|
|
preferred the divergent one he once built himself.
|
|
|
Why leave then? Why did you stop?
|
|
|
|
|
|
Because that was no life.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Now life sparkles, everything feels brighter
|
|
|
and more exciting. I got my will to live
|
|
|
back. Before, there was nothing but my
|
|
|
body. I was willing to die for it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
He pulls up the sleeve of his shirt to show me his
|
|
|
shoulder, where he has tattooed a symbol for a
|
|
|
community friend who died.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I hope I never go back.
|
|
|
I miss them every day.
|
|
|
|
|
|
This is the last dichotomy. For the divergent digital
|
|
|
body can’t stay in a Backplace for very long, the
|
|
|
intimacy of it is unbearable. It is an intimacy that
|
|
|
floods, and overruns.
|
|
|
In their definition of intimacy in the context of a public
|
|
|
surrounding a cultural phenomenon, the author Lauren
|
|
|
Berlant denotes that intimacy itself always requires
|
|
|
hopeful imagination. It requires belief in the existence
|
|
|
of an ideal other who is emotionally attuned to one's
|
|
|
own experiences and fantasies, conditioned by the
|
|
|
same longings and with willing reciprocity (2008). (10)
|
|
|
|
|
|
In the context of the intimacy of a Backplace, where
|
|
|
divergent digital bodies have formed a community
|
|
|
around existing outside the healthy and standard,
|
|
|
longing and hopeful intimacy becomes a heavy-
|
|
|
hearted and cardinal concept.
|
|
|
Being in these rooms and finding care and love for
|
|
|
others like you can be so uncomfortable when the
|
|
|
longings, experiences, and fantasies you are sharing
|
|
|
are centered around pain. The shared cultural
|
|
|
experience of existing as a collective divergent digital
|
|
|
body promises a fantasy of belonging, a collective
|
|
|
hope, and commitment that is extremely fragile.
|
|
|
|
|
|
There is a duality then, if not a dichotomy. As a
|
|
|
divergent body, there is nothing you crave more than to
|
|
|
be seen and to be loved in a space where you are safe,
|
|
|
where the faces looking at you are not repulsed but
|
|
|
warm with familiarity. Yet, it is this very warmth that
|
|
|
becomes unbearable and an inherently traumatic
|
|
|
intimacy. Being loved at your worst, at your most
|
|
|
embarrassing, cultural borderline self is an agonizing
|
|
|
duality to deal with. McGlotten, who was referenced
|
|
|
earlier concerning the potential of bot-feelings of a
|
|
|
digital body, now comes back to remind us of their
|
|
|
impossibility. In his book, he talks of a digital intimacy
|
|
|
that inundates us and is both a source of connection
|
|
|
and disconnection (McGlotten, 2013). We are looking
|
|
|
at a smaller scale than he does, but intimacy in the
|
|
|
context of shared vulnerability can be a need just as
|
|
|
intolerable.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Certain kinds of witnessing can become curses, shivers
|
|
|
of resonance so close to an explosion of glass if only
|
|
|
you strike the cord that will keep me going.
|
|
|
Certain kinds of divergence can only end with leaving
|
|
|
or death, truth be told.
|
|
|
People in these bodies know this, even if the digital
|
|
|
bodies behave as if there is hope in a future where the
|
|
|
divergence brings joy to one’s life consistently. The
|
|
|
shared vulnerability itself then, is unbearable. I need
|
|
|
you to see me, I need you, who are just like me at my
|
|
|
worst, to love me. When you do, I can’t stand it. It
|
|
|
ruins both of us to be seen this way and we need it so
|
|
|
desperately. It has to exist and yet it can’t for long.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I leave even though I love all of your digital bodies.
|
|
|
I leave because I love you, little digital body and you
|
|
|
are me.
|
|
|
|
|
|
## 2. A LIFE TO BE HAD 11
|
|
|
|
|
|
## sidenotes
|
|
|
|
|
|
1. You’re dreaming
|
|
|
again, good.
|
|
|
Would you feel
|
|
|
closer to me if you
|
|
|
could hear my
|
|
|
voice?
|
|
|
Is my voice a sound?
|
|
|
Could it be a
|
|
|
feeling?
|
|
|
|
|
|
2. I will be honest
|
|
|
with you, I have little
|
|
|
patience for this
|
|
|
recurring line of
|
|
|
thought that seeks to
|
|
|
distinguish people’s
|
|
|
noses from their
|
|
|
hearts, as if there
|
|
|
was a physical love
|
|
|
that is the valuable
|
|
|
one and a virtual
|
|
|
imaginary one that is
|
|
|
feeble and
|
|
|
unworthy.
|
|
|
|
|
|
3. Initially, when a
|
|
|
member he often
|
|
|
argued with o ered
|
|
|
to pray for him
|
|
|
Mandel had
|
|
|
replied: “You can
|
|
|
shovel your self-
|
|
|
aggrandizing
|
|
|
sentiments up you
|
|
|
wide ass sideways
|
|
|
for the duration as
|
|
|
far as I'm
|
|
|
concerned." Later,
|
|
|
as the cancer
|
|
|
progressed: “I ain't
|
|
|
nearly as brave as
|
|
|
you all think. I am
|
|
|
scared silly of the
|
|
|
pain of dying this
|
|
|
way. I am not very
|
|
|
good at playing
|
|
|
saint. Pray for me,
|
|
|
please.
|
|
|
|
|
|
4. It’s out of care
|
|
|
and not lack of
|
|
|
relevance that I am
|
|
|
not showing you
|
|
|
Mandel’s goodbye
|
|
|
message. It’s enough
|
|
|
to know he was deep
|
|
|
in the grief of having
|
|
|
to leave a
|
|
|
community he loved
|
|
|
and cared for and
|
|
|
that pain was felt in
|
|
|
every word.
|
|
|
|
|
|
5. The first bot
|
|
|
communities on the
|
|
|
internet are now
|
|
|
born, half-
|
|
|
mistakenly. They are
|
|
|
always spiritual
|
|
|
communities posting
|
|
|
religious images
|
|
|
created by artificial
|
|
|
intelligence, all the
|
|
|
comments echoing
|
|
|
choirs of bots
|
|
|
praising. Amen,
|
|
|
amen, amen. I am
|
|
|
not naive, I know
|
|
|
they are built by
|
|
|
humans but it is this
|
|
|
performance of
|
|
|
religiosity that I am
|
|
|
interested in, and
|
|
|
how little humanity
|
|
|
is shown in it. It is
|
|
|
something else.
|
|
|
|
|
|
6. A step in a step in
|
|
|
a step, sorry.
|
|
|
|
|
|
7. I am talking here
|
|
|
about the distress
|
|
|
caused by mental
|
|
|
health issues that
|
|
|
have direct
|
|
|
connections to
|
|
|
physicality—self-
|
|
|
injuring in any direct
|
|
|
form; food, drugs,
|
|
|
pain. The culturally
|
|
|
uncomfortable
|
|
|
diseases, the it’s-
|
|
|
personal-
|
|
|
responsibility, and
|
|
|
just-stop disorders.
|
|
|
This is a hidden
|
|
|
topic of this text
|
|
|
because I cared
|
|
|
more about the pain
|
|
|
surrounding them
|
|
|
and the reasons to
|
|
|
hide rather than the
|
|
|
grim physicality of
|
|
|
them all.
|
|
|
|
|
|
8. Of course, the
|
|
|
river itself is not a
|
|
|
river; it’s many
|
|
|
confused streams
|
|
|
that believe
|
|
|
themselves both the
|
|
|
same and separate. I
|
|
|
don’t know where
|
|
|
I’m going with this, I
|
|
|
just don’t love the
|
|
|
river of normativity
|
|
|
and I’d rather go
|
|
|
swim in the ocean of
|
|
|
dreams with you.
|
|
|
|
|
|
9. I heard the idea of
|
|
|
living questions for
|
|
|
the first time in
|
|
|
“Letters to A Young
|
|
|
Poet” by Rainer
|
|
|
Maria Rilke and then
|
|
|
again on the podcast
|
|
|
On Being with Krista
|
|
|
Tippet. It may be a
|
|
|
bit transparent but
|
|
|
this entire text is
|
|
|
informed by the
|
|
|
concept of keeping
|
|
|
the unsolved in your
|
|
|
heart and learning to
|
|
|
love it. Not
|
|
|
searching for the
|
|
|
answers for we
|
|
|
cannot live them yet.
|
|
|
The point is to live it
|
|
|
all. It could be that
|
|
|
at some point we will
|
|
|
live our way to an
|
|
|
answer but it is
|
|
|
feeling the questions
|
|
|
alive within us that is
|
|
|
important. Do you?
|
|
|
|
|
|
10. If we were to be
|
|
|
honest, the entire
|
|
|
exercise of writing
|
|
|
this for you requires
|
|
|
this very faith.
|
|
|
|
|
|
11. Was this the end of this story?
|
|
|
In the epilogue, you sit your body down and enter your
|
|
|
computer. The air coming in from the window smells wet and
|
|
|
earthy, new. The sun shines low on the horizon.
|
|
|
You log in to the internet and realize you are being told a story.
|
|
|
You start to listen, carefully and, full of love, touch the story to
|
|
|
let it know you are there. Delicate-fingered, curious like a child
|
|
|
holding a fallen bird. I hold you and the story tentatively.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I don’t know if I am touching you, to tell you the truth. Digital
|
|
|
bodies are stories, like physical bodies are, like dreams are,
|
|
|
and like water is.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Stories that are hard to tell and hard to hear and even more,
|
|
|
maybe, hard to understand. I have loved these stories and I
|
|
|
have loved telling them to you. I hope you understand that my
|
|
|
goal was for you to live these questions, to feel these stories in
|
|
|
their confusion. My digital body, my bot-feelings, my divergent
|
|
|
communities. I have given them to you, so they may live longer,
|
|
|
like an obsolete but beloved cyborg shown in a museum.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Look: I was here, Look: I was loved, Look: I was saved.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The digital bodies that kept me alive, kept me from becoming
|
|
|
fully a machine are no longer around in these online rooms.
|
|
|
They are in different places, being touched by tentative hands,
|
|
|
being loved for more than their divergence.
|
|
|
I am too.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The rooms, the backplaces, however, are still full of others, divergent
|
|
|
digital bodies who did not leave, who keep caring for each other at the
|
|
|
bottom of the whirlpool. There is no happy ending because there is no
|
|
|
ending. They keep typing and hoping, writing their collective pain
|
|
|
down on keyboards that transmit love letters to each other. I am not
|
|
|
embarrassed by my care for you, but you may be so if it helps. I know
|
|
|
how overwhelming intimacy can be.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Telling you these stories was important for me, so much so that I will
|
|
|
tell you so many more in a different place if you wish to listen to me
|
|
|
longer. With this story, I dreamt of a digital body for you. It came from
|
|
|
an ocean of dreams, into a primordial soup that gave it enough shape
|
|
|
to become wild rivers, deep streams, sound waves. It flooded and
|
|
|
now, it leaves. A digital body that grew its own feelings, looked for
|
|
|
others like it, and realized its divergence and the need to leave. A
|
|
|
dream body, a primordial body, a disruptive body, a divergent body,
|
|
|
and now, a leaving body. This last story, however, of the leaving and
|
|
|
loving body, is yet to be told.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The sun is now almost up, and the birds are alive and awake, telling
|
|
|
each other stories just outside the room. We don’t have so much time
|
|
|
left. I have made you something, to tell your digital body the stories of
|
|
|
the leaving and loving body. It is a webpage, the address is
|
|
|
adadesign.nl/backplaces.
|
|
|
|
|
|
You open the page, and you are asked to write the characters you see
|
|
|
in a captcha. E5qr7.
|
|
|
eSq9p.
|
|
|
8oc8y.
|
|
|
Fuck.
|
|
|
You try not to panic, but you know you have been detected.
|
|
|
|
|
|
You pack up your things: the pie I made you, a love letter, two
|
|
|
hands made out of felt, a star, a door, a stuffed animal; and
|
|
|
you leave again.
|
|
|
|
|
|
## references
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adler, P.A. and Adler, P. (2008) ‘The Cyber Worlds of
|
|
|
self-injurers: Deviant communities, relationships, and
|
|
|
selves’, Symbolic Interaction, 31(1), pp. 33–56.
|
|
|
doi:10.1525/si.2008.31.1.33.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Berlant, L.G. (2008) The female complaint the
|
|
|
unfinished business of sentimentality in American
|
|
|
culture. Durham: Duke University Press.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chu, J. (2021) Looking for similarities across Complex
|
|
|
Systems, MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of
|
|
|
Technology. Available at:
|
|
|
https://news.mit.edu/2021/jorn-dunkel-complex-
|
|
|
systems-0627 (Accessed: 08 March 2024).
|
|
|
|
|
|
Deleuze, G., Boyman, A. and Rajchman, J. (2001) Pure
|
|
|
immanence: Essays on a life. New York: Zone Books.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Goffman, E. (2022) Stigma: Notes on the management
|
|
|
of spoiled identity. London: Penguin Classics.
|
|
|
Hafner, K. (1997) The epic saga of the well, Wired.
|
|
|
Available at: https://www.wired.com/1997/05/ff-well/
|
|
|
(Accessed: 01 February 2024).
|
|
|
|
|
|
Haraway, D.J. (2000) ‘A cyborg manifesto: Science,
|
|
|
technology, and socialist-feminism in the late twentieth
|
|
|
century’, Posthumanism, pp. 69–84. doi:10.1007/978-
|
|
|
1-137-05194-3_10.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hyacint (2017) Harmonic series to 32,
|
|
|
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Harmonic_series_to_32.svg.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kolcaba, K.Y. and Kolcaba, R.J. (1991) ‘An analysis of
|
|
|
the concept of comfort’, Journal of Advanced Nursing,
|
|
|
16(11), pp. 1301–1310. doi:10.1111/j.1365-
|
|
|
2648.1991.tb01558.x.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Leonard, A. (no date) All Too Real,
|
|
|
https://people.well.com/. Available at:
|
|
|
https://people.well.com/user/cynsa/tom/tom14.html
|
|
|
(Accessed: 01 April 2024).
|
|
|
|
|
|
McGlotten, S. (2013) Virtual intimacies: Media, affect,
|
|
|
and queer sociality [Preprint]. doi:10.1353
|
|
|
book27643.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Rumi, J. al-Din and Barks, C. (1995) ‘Story Water’, in
|
|
|
The Essential Rumi. New
|
|
|
|
|
|
Schwartz, C. (2022) Lecture on Loneliness, Granta.
|
|
|
Available at: https://granta.com/lecture-on-loneliness/
|
|
|
(Accessed: 08 March 2024).
|
|
|
|
|
|
Smith, N., Wickes, R. and Underwood, M. (2013)
|
|
|
‘Managing a marginalised identity in pro-anorexia and
|
|
|
fat acceptance cybercommunities’, Journal of
|
|
|
Sociology, 51(4), pp. 950–967.
|
|
|
doi:10.1177/1440783313486220.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Yun, J. (2020) ‘The Leaving Season’, in Some Are
|
|
|
Always Hungry. University of Nebraska Press.
|
|
|
|
|
|
# <?/water bodies>
|