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In Liquid Love Zygmunt Bauman argued that the solidity and security once provided by life-long partnerships has been ‘liquefied’ by rampant individualisation and technological change. He believes internet dating is symptomatic of social and technological change that transforms modern courtship into a type of commodified game. This article explores the experiences of users of digital dating and hookup applications (or ‘apps’) in order assess to what extent a digital transformation of intimacy might be underway. It examines the different affordances provided by dating apps and whether users feel the technology has influenced their sexual practices and views on long-term relationships, monogamy and other romantic ideals. This study shows that dating apps are intermediaries through which individuals engage in strategic performances in pursuit of love, sex and intimacy. Ultimately, this article contends that some accounts of dating apps and modern romantic practices are too pessimistic, and downplay the positives of ‘networked intimacy’.

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This page is a summary of: Liquid love? Dating apps, sex, relationships and the digital transformation of intimacy, Journal of Sociology, September 2016, SAGE Publications,
DOI: 10.1177/1440783316662718.
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