Dear AiOR community It was a delight to see so many of you in Brazil. What an amazing AoiR. In my talk I mentioned my new book, Mourning on Mobile Media: Everyday Affective Witnessing (MIT Press). It explores how our daily mobile phone practices shape how we grieve and witness loss—from posting eulogies about personal bereavement to ecogrief and more-than-human loss. It also considers how mourning rituals can connect us to hopeful, collective actions. Find it here: https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262553551/mourning-on-mobile-media/ There is an OA version. 😊 And for those that like the physical version and live in the US, you can get 20% off with the code READMIT20 at checkout at https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/798034/mourning-on-mobile-media-by-... Larissa -- Distinguished Professor Larissa Hjorth, FAHA School of Media and Communication RMIT University Naarm, Wurundjeri country Current projects: ARC Future Fellow, <https://www.themourningafter.net/> The Mourning After<https://www.themourningafter.net/> ARC DP, <https://www.ageinganddata.net/> Ageing in Data<https://www.ageinganddata.net/> ARC LP (ACMI/ AMaGA), <https://www.museumdigitalsocialfutures.net/> Social Digital Museum Futures<https://www.museumdigitalsocialfutures.net/> I acknowledge the Traditional Owners of the unceded lands on which I work and live — the Wurundjeri people of the Boonwurrung and Woiwurrung language groups of the Eastern Kulin Nation — and pay my respects to Elders past, present and emerging. Always was, always will be, Aboriginal land.