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What It Means When We Take Selfie Photos

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interview, girl, selfie, mirror, reflection, smiling, happy

Consider this: Instagram has 100 million active users.

And the Facebook-owned photo-sharing service has, at last count, 109 million photos tagged, simply, "#me."

By the numbers, if you're on Instagram and you haven't taken a picture of yourself, you're doing it wrong.

Yet the digital self-portrait—the selfie—is somehow seen as a scourge, a threat to our well-being, a trend that must end.

We talked to psychologist Pamela Rutledge, director of the Media Psychology Research Center, who dismissed these critiques as weak pop science.

"Most of these people who toss around these psychological terms like 'narcissism' or 'addiction' don't understand that those are serious diagnostic criteria," Rutledge says. "We've gotten so we just chuck these things around, and it scares people. People are basically scared of technology because it's new, and we're pathologizing it."

While the mass adoption of smartphones and social networks is new, the urge to record one's own image is as old as humanity, she says, pointing to cave paintings and Egyptian hieroglyphs.

Along with photography came the self-portrait. But where we had to sit still and grim-faced for 19th-century cameras, Rutledge points out, we now can take photos anywhere, at a moment's notice.

"In this environment, the only way to get to know people is to disclose something of yourself," Rutledge says.

And there's nothing more self-revelatory than a photo.

Was this one of the first selfies? Frederick Hollyer was a British photographer who worked in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.



In this selfie, the photographer/subject is "trying out" a face. The fluidity of digital media allows for provisional, disposable identities.



When people use the "selfie" tag, as opposed to simply "me" or "myself," it suggests an awareness of the photo's "contrived" nature, Rutledge says.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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