Le, Hannah2021-10-182022-05-312022-05-312020Le, Hannah. 2020. "Blasé Attitude, Hyperreality, and Social Media." Crossing Borders: Student Reflections on Global Social Issues 2(1). doi:10.31542/cb.v2i1.1990https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14078/2467Though there is much to gain through technological development, it is also necessary to critique the ubiquitous presence of devices in social life and the overstimulation they bring. The increasing mediation of reality through applications such as Instagram could blur the division between the ‘real’ world of everyday life and a ‘hyperreality’ fostered by such applications. Using concepts from theorists Jean Baudrillard and Georg Simmel, this paper presents a critique of the overstimulation of information through social media. With continuous and repetitive material being recycled online, it is discussed how a blasé attitude is used to protect oneself from being informationally overwhelmed.206.45KBPDFenAttribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC)social mediaInstagramhyperreal contentattitudesBlasé attitude, hyperreality, and social mediaStudent Articlehttps://doi.org/10.31542/cb.v2i1.1990