Abstract

This article examines how the use of emergent smart baby monitors re-mediates parent–baby touch, notions of connection, parental sensing and the interpretation of babies’ bodies, and contributes to the formation of subjectivities. Domestic baby monitors are a mid 20th-century phenomenon which normalizes parental anxieties. While baby monitoring is not new, the ‘next generation’ of wearable bio-sensing baby monitors offers a different relationship to the body via the physiological tracking of babies, and the sending of information or alerts to parents’ via connected mobile apps. These devices have been associated with creating unnecessary parental anxiety and the digital ‘replacement’ of parental touch, although little research exists on their use in the context of parent–infant interaction or touch. The authors present a qualitative case study of one such technology, Owlet, to explore how parents experienced, understood and negotiated the discourses of parent–infant touch that circulate around and through Owlet, with particular attention to the relationship between visual and tactile resources. The study focuses on both its multimodal design and take-up by parents through analysis of interviews with the Owlet designer, Owlet as a product, focus groups with parents and families’ home experiences of Owlet. Data is analysed through a tri-part lens, which first combines multimodal social semiotic and sensory ethnographic approaches, and then the analytical concept of governmentality. The findings are discussed in relation to four analytical themes: (1) creating a desire for digitally mediated touch; (2) spatiality of digitally mediated connection; (3) formulating the ‘right kind’ of touch; and (4) reconfiguring ‘knowing touch’. The authors discuss multimodal discourses pertinent to the shaping of parent–baby touch practices including: rationality and efficiency; individualism, autonomy and freedom; and self-improvement and empowerment. They conclude that the discourses that coalesce around Owlet contribute to the reconfiguration of parent–baby touch and the formation of neoliberal subjectivities.

Highlights

  • This article examines how the use of emergent smart baby monitors remediates parent–baby touch, notions of connection, parental sensing and the interpretation of babies’ bodies, and contributes to the formation of subjectivities

  • Owlet digitally mediates touch through its direct physical contact with a baby’s skin, its influence on parental touch practices and the tactile landscape of family life. These devices have been associated with the digital ‘replacement’ of parental touch; little research exists on their use in relation to parent–infant touch interaction

  • Governance to refer to the conduct of people, in which self-governance is a guiding force. This brought broader socio-technical and socio-political features of touch as it is digitally mediated to the fore, highlighting discourses pertinent to the shaping of parent–baby touch practices mobilized across the findings and their contribution to the reconfiguration of parent–baby touch and the formation of neoliberal subjectivities

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Summary

Abstr act

This article examines how the use of emergent smart baby monitors remediates parent–baby touch, notions of connection, parental sensing and the interpretation of babies’ bodies, and contributes to the formation of subjectivities. While baby monitoring is not new, the ‘ generation’ of wearable bio-sensing baby monitors offers a different relationship to the body via the physiological tracking of babies, and the sending of information or alerts to parents’ via connected mobile apps These devices have been associated with creating unnecessary parental anxiety and the digital ‘replacement’ of parental touch, little research exists on their use in the context of parent–infant interaction or touch. While baby monitoring is not new, the ‘ generation’ of wearable bio-sensing monitors offers a different relationship to the body via the physiological tracking of babies and the sending of information to parents via mobile apps We use one such device – Owlet – as a research probe to study its affordances and use in the family home. This brought broader socio-technical and socio-political features of touch as it is digitally mediated to the fore, highlighting discourses pertinent to the shaping of parent–baby touch practices mobilized across the findings and their contribution to the reconfiguration of parent–baby touch and the formation of neoliberal subjectivities

Back g r ou n d
ResearchDesignandMeth odolo g y
Recruitment and participants
Data collection and materials
Analytical framework and process
Creating a desire for a digitally mediated touch
Spatiality of digitally mediated connection
Bio g r ap h ical Not e s
Full Text
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