Eliciting Euphoria Online: The Aesthetics of “ASMR” Video Culture


Autoria(s): Rob Gallagher
Data(s)

01/06/2016

Resumo

“Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response” (ASMR) is a term that has emerged online to describe a mysterious tingling sensation that some people experience in response to particular audiovisual and interpersonal “triggers.” Initially coalescing via discussion threads on health forums, ASMR culture quickly began using platforms like YouTube and Reddit to exchange trigger videos. This paper frames the emergence of ASMR video culture as an example of how bodies and algorithms are conspiring to bring into being new cultural forms that can seem literally inexplicable on first encounter. Treating videos as “inputs,” judged not as messages to be understood or interpreted but by their ability to elicit particular affective and somatic “outputs,” ASMR communities cultivate a quasi-cybernetic relationship with the moving image, using video as a vehicle for “feeling out” phenomena that seem to thwart linguistic articulation and rational comprehension.

Identificador

(dlps) 13761232.0040.202

http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.13761232.0040.202

(doi) http://dx.doi.org/10.3998/fc.13761232.0040.202

(issn) 2471-4364

(aleph) missing

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Ann Arbor, MI: Michigan Publishing, University of Michigan Library

Direitos

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Fonte

Film Criticism: vol. 40, no. 2

Tipo

text