Medien & Kommunikationswissenschaft (Sep 2024)

Changes in Young People’s Media Repertoires. Longitudinal Insights from a Communicative Figurational Approach

  • Katrin Potzel,
  • Saskia Draheim,
  • Paulina Domdey,
  • Claudia Lampert,
  • Rudolf Kammerl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5771/1615-634X-2024-3-280
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 72, no. 3
pp. 280 – 296

Abstract

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Young people use digital media for various purposes, such as communication, entertainment, and information. As they grow up, their media repertoires become more complex and diverse. This article examines these media repertoires in more detail, considering the dynamic changes in individual development, social circumstances, and deep mediatization. Using semi-structured interviews with young people and one parent each, as well as a media-actor mapping, the study reveals significant changes in the composition and function of media repertoires from late childhood to early and middle adolescence. Drawing on the theoretical background of communicative figurations, it highlights changes in media ensembles, actor constellations, frames of relevance, and communicative practices. Besides changes in media repertoires for coping with developmental tasks and individual transitions in life, social factors such as the role of family and peers are considered. The empirical findings also point to the added value of qualitative longitudinal data which allows for a comprehensive examination of the complexity of changing media repertoires within a deeply mediatized society and a rapidly evolving media environment.