I giovani e l'isolamento sociale Una forma ambivalente di fallimento
60-70 p.
This article examines youth social isolation as an ambivalent form of'failure' in contemporary societies. Among 18–30-year-olds, digitally mediated everyday life, AI-enabled interaction, and the rise of JOMO (joy of missing out) seem to privilege bodily withdrawal and challenge ideals of face-to-face sociability. Drawing on Simmel's notion of ambivalence and Schutz's'stop-and-think', the paper argues that solitude is not necessarily social defeat: it can become a reflective resource for identity work and selective participation. Evidence from European youth mobility shows how Erasmus experiences and'restanza' practices reframe isolation into autonomy, care, and community-oriented success. [Publisher's Text]
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Società degli individui : 84, 3, 2025-
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Información
Código DOI: 10.3280/LAS2025-084006
ISSN: 1972-5752
MATERIAS
KEYWORDS
- Youth, social isolation, smartphone-mediated sociability, JOMO/FOMO, mobility
