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Down the rabbit hole: an ethnography on loving, desiring and tindering in Cape Town

This ethnography on loving, desiring and tindering offers insights into how the dating application (app) Tinder is adopted in establishing various kinds of intimacy in Cape Town. Given the scholarly neglect of intimacy's sensory aspects (especially when looking at Africa), the study, based on interv...

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Main Author: Junck, Leah Davina
Other Authors: Nyamnjoh, Francis B
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Social Anthropology 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Junck, Leah Davina
author2 Nyamnjoh, Francis B
author_browse Junck, Leah Davina
Nyamnjoh, Francis B
author_facet Nyamnjoh, Francis B
Junck, Leah Davina
author_sort Junck, Leah Davina
collection Thesis
description This ethnography on loving, desiring and tindering offers insights into how the dating application (app) Tinder is adopted in establishing various kinds of intimacy in Cape Town. Given the scholarly neglect of intimacy's sensory aspects (especially when looking at Africa), the study, based on interviews and participant observation involving 25 participants, lends weight to phenomenological experiences unfolding in partially cybernated social processes. Considering the body to be a defining dimension of human social existence, it looks at how engagements with relative strangers unfold as virtual reality and realised virtuality. Tinder and other apps have shaped what it means to get to know another individual beyond conventional sensory perceptions. Technologies as means of self-extension in Michel Foucault's sense and practices of relating (and non-relating) reach far in sundry ways. They have a significant impact on social identities, politics, economies and demographic developments. They also hold the promise of different economies of bodies and pleasures, as Foucault presaged. This study's findings show that, although dating apps pervade everyday experiences and are embraced as extensions of the self, they are simultaneously disassociated from daily life and hypernormalised as less than ‘real'. Desires for more meaningful and complete experiences were continuously manoeuvred by study participants despite disappointments, uncertainties and hurt. What these approaches of stretching oneself beyond profiled essences entailed is at the heart of this ethnography. The resolute, adaptive usage of Tinder despite disillusionments owes to the app offering refuge into both fantasy and reality, which have long become hybrid in a digitally enhanced experience. The multitude of dating app experiences in what Stempfhuber and Liegl (2016) have referred to as a ‘rabbit hole' with skewed proportions may not be an absolute escape from reality. However, it does provide opportunities for re-encountering different facets of the self when stretching beyond them. What is, nonetheless, needed to embrace technologically facilitated dating as ‘real' encounters of equals is to understand oneself and others as non-unitary and incomplete. Thus, I argue, a broader view of relationships is needed than ideas and ideals of ‘modern' romance and dating app designs relying on binary categories currently promote.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:34.243Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
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publisher Social Anthropology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35694 Down the rabbit hole: an ethnography on loving, desiring and tindering in Cape Town Junck, Leah Davina Nyamnjoh, Francis B Social Anthropology This ethnography on loving, desiring and tindering offers insights into how the dating application (app) Tinder is adopted in establishing various kinds of intimacy in Cape Town. Given the scholarly neglect of intimacy's sensory aspects (especially when looking at Africa), the study, based on interviews and participant observation involving 25 participants, lends weight to phenomenological experiences unfolding in partially cybernated social processes. Considering the body to be a defining dimension of human social existence, it looks at how engagements with relative strangers unfold as virtual reality and realised virtuality. Tinder and other apps have shaped what it means to get to know another individual beyond conventional sensory perceptions. Technologies as means of self-extension in Michel Foucault's sense and practices of relating (and non-relating) reach far in sundry ways. They have a significant impact on social identities, politics, economies and demographic developments. They also hold the promise of different economies of bodies and pleasures, as Foucault presaged. This study's findings show that, although dating apps pervade everyday experiences and are embraced as extensions of the self, they are simultaneously disassociated from daily life and hypernormalised as less than ‘real'. Desires for more meaningful and complete experiences were continuously manoeuvred by study participants despite disappointments, uncertainties and hurt. What these approaches of stretching oneself beyond profiled essences entailed is at the heart of this ethnography. The resolute, adaptive usage of Tinder despite disillusionments owes to the app offering refuge into both fantasy and reality, which have long become hybrid in a digitally enhanced experience. The multitude of dating app experiences in what Stempfhuber and Liegl (2016) have referred to as a ‘rabbit hole' with skewed proportions may not be an absolute escape from reality. However, it does provide opportunities for re-encountering different facets of the self when stretching beyond them. What is, nonetheless, needed to embrace technologically facilitated dating as ‘real' encounters of equals is to understand oneself and others as non-unitary and incomplete. Thus, I argue, a broader view of relationships is needed than ideas and ideals of ‘modern' romance and dating app designs relying on binary categories currently promote. 2022-02-14T09:39:04Z 2022-02-14T09:39:04Z 2021 2022-02-14T09:36:47Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35694 eng application/pdf Social Anthropology Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Social Anthropology
Junck, Leah Davina
Down the rabbit hole: an ethnography on loving, desiring and tindering in Cape Town
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Down the rabbit hole: an ethnography on loving, desiring and tindering in Cape Town
title_full Down the rabbit hole: an ethnography on loving, desiring and tindering in Cape Town
title_fullStr Down the rabbit hole: an ethnography on loving, desiring and tindering in Cape Town
title_full_unstemmed Down the rabbit hole: an ethnography on loving, desiring and tindering in Cape Town
title_short Down the rabbit hole: an ethnography on loving, desiring and tindering in Cape Town
title_sort down the rabbit hole an ethnography on loving desiring and tindering in cape town
topic Social Anthropology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35694
work_keys_str_mv AT junckleahdavina downtherabbitholeanethnographyonlovingdesiringandtinderingincapetown