digital humanities
-
The Return of the Repressed: Pseudonymisation in the Digital Age
How is our online world reshaping the unconscious? This essay insightfully dissects how perceived anonymity online enables the return of repressed impulses, for better or worse. Blending psychoanalytic theory with ethics, it investigates digital self-expression through the veil of pseudonyms. A thoughtful read for understanding technology’s impacts on psychology and society. Continue reading
affect regulation, Affective Neuroscience, Analyses, cultural unconscious, Essay, Fears, Freud, Human Condition, interdisciplinary, Paul Wadey, Psychoanalytic psychotherapy, Psychodynamic, Relational psychoanalytic, repression, return of the repressed, Traumaalgorithmic bias, anonymity debate, anonymity dominant groups, anonymity empowerment, anonymity ethics, anonymity harm, anonymity marginalized groups, anonymity psychology, catfish, compromise formation, content moderation, cultural unconscious, digital architecture, digital deception, digital ethics, digital humanities, digital repression, Freud, internet anonymity, internet pseudonymity, monetization, online anonymity, online communities, online culture, online pseudonymity, online psychoanalysis, polarization, pseudonymity ethics, pseudonymity psychology, psychoanalytic theory, radicalization, repressed memories, repressed trauma, repression defense, return of the repressed, surveillance capitalism, unconscious conflicts, unconscious online