Introduction: Welcome to Mardin | The social media landscape: Individuals and groups in the local media ecology | Visual posting: Showing off and shifting boundaries between private and public | Relationships: Kinship, family and friends | Hidden romance and love | The wider world: Politics, the visible and the invisible | Conclusion: What kind of social change?

About Why We Post

Why do we post on social media? Is it true that we are replacing face-to-face relationships with on-screen life? Are we becoming more narcissistic with the rise of selfies? Does social media create or suppress political action, destroy privacy or become the only way to sell something? And are these claims equally true for a factory worker in China and an IT professional in India?

With these questions in mind, nine anthropologists each spent 15 months living in communities in China, Brazil, Turkey, Chile, India, England, Italy and Trinidad. They studied not only platforms but the content of social media to understand both why we post and the consequences of social media on our lives. Their findings indicate that social media is more than communication – it is also a place where we now live.

This series explores and compares the results in a collection of ground-breaking and accessible ethnographic studies. To find out more, visit ucl.ac.uk/why-we-post.