*Digital Media, Psychoanalysis and the Subject Editors: Jacob Johanssen (University of Westminster) and Steffen Krüger (University of Oslo)* We are very pleased to announce the publication of the special issue Digital Media, Psychoanalysis and the Subject, published by the open access journal *CM: Communication and Media*. This is the first-ever special issue of a media and communication journal that addresses questions of subjectivity, digital media and the Internet with a focus on psychoanalytic theory. The contributing authors seek to reassess and reinvigorate psychoanalytic thinking in media and communication studies. They undertake this reassessment with a particular focus on the question of what psychoanalytic concepts, theories and modes of inquiry can contribute to the study of contemporary digital media. The collection features a broad range of psychoanalytic approaches - from Freudian, via Kleinian and relational, to Lacanian and Jungian - and covers a wide range of issues - from the uses (and abuses) of the mobile phone and other digital devices, the circulation of traumatising images and anxiety-inducing tracking apps, via hysteric feminist discourses, digital fetishes and the exploitation of YouTube celebrities, to the meaning of the gangbang in a priapistic media culture and this culture's emptying-out of meaning towards its climax in a cosmic spasm... We hope that colleagues will find this collection informative and engaging and a helpful resource for their own work. *Table of Contents and Download Links:* Thinking (with) the Unconscious in Media and Communication Studies: Introduction to the Special Issue Steffen Krüger (University of Oslo) and Jacob Johanssen (University of Westminster) http://aseestant.ceon.rs/index.php/comman/article/view/13131/5045 Framing the Mobile Phone: The Psychopathologies of an Everyday Object Iain MacRury and Candida Yates (Bournemouth University) http://aseestant.ceon.rs/index.php/comman/article/view/11517/5044 '"If you show your real face, you’ll lose 10 000 followers” – The Gaze of the Other and Transformations of Shame in Digitalized Relationships Vera King (Sigmund-Freud-Institute & Goethe-University) http://aseestant.ceon.rs/index.php/comman/article/view/11504/5043 Media Traumatization, Symbolic Wounds and Digital Culture Allen Meek (Massey University) http://aseestant.ceon.rs/index.php/comman/article/view/11442/5041 The Other Self in Free Fall: Anxiety and Automated Tracking Applications Christopher Gutierrez (McGill University) http://aseestant.ceon.rs/index.php/comman/article/view/11285/5038 Digital Feminisms and the Split Subject: Short-circuits through Lacan’s Four Discourses Alison Horbury (University of Melbourne) http://aseestant.ceon.rs/index.php/comman/article/view/11347/5039 A Digital Death Drive? Hubris and Learning in Psychoanalysis and Cybernetics Colin John Campbell (York University / OCAD University) http://aseestant.ceon.rs/index.php/comman/article/view/11241/5037 YouTubers, Online Selves and the Performance Principle: Notes from a Post-Jungian Perspective Greg Singh (University of Stirling) http://aseestant.ceon.rs/index.php/comman/article/view/11414/5040 The Female Target: Digitality, Psychoanalysis and the Gangbang Diego Semerene (Brown University) http://aseestant.ceon.rs/index.php/comman/article/view/11218/5036 Chaosmic Spasm: Guattari, Stiegler, Berardi, and the Digital Apocalypse Mark Featherstone (Keele University) http://aseestant.ceon.rs/index.php/comman/article/view/11501/5042 With many thanks to the editors of *CM: Journal of Communication and Media*, particularly Jelena Kleut, for their generous help in realising this issue.