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List of contents
Introduction
Part One: The Body Mediated
1. ‘Find love in Canada’: Distributed selves, abstraction, and the problem of privacy and autonomy
Vincent Miller, University of Kent, UK
2. Embodied Verification: Linking Identities and Bodies on NSFW Reddit
Emily van der Nagel, Monash University, Australia
3. #ILYSM*: Instagram as Fan Practice, Hattie Liew,
National University of Singapore, Singapore
4. Ethan’s Golden YouTube Play Button: The evolution of a child influencer
Carolina Cambre and Maha Abdul Ghani, Concordia University, Canada
Part Two: The Body Politicized
5. Performing Visibility: Representing the Palestinian Freedom Riders through Non-Violent Protest and Visual Activism
Gary Bratchford, University of Central Lancashire, UK
6. #WhoNeedsFeminism? Mapping Leaky, Networked Affective Feminist Resistance
Jessica Ringrose, UCL London, UK and Kaity Mendes, University of Leicester, UK
7. ‘Smart is the Nü (boshi) Sexy’: How China’s PhD women are fighting stereotypes using social media
Jing Zeng, IKMZ Zurich, Switzerland
8. Online Ajumma: Self-presentations of contemporary elderly women via digital media in Korea
Jung Moon, Seoul Women's University, South Korea and Crystal Abidin, Curtin University, Australia
Part Three: The Body Felt
9. Naked and Unafraid: Nudity in Reclaiming Witchcraft Rituals
Emma Quilty, University of Newcastle, Australia
10. “It’s like a rush of ‘man’ feeling”: Analyzing sexuality and felt-sense in men’s digital media communications
Kaye Hare, University of British Columbia, Canada
11. Agential hysterias: a practice approach to embodiment on social media
Katrin Tiidenberg, Lea Muldtofte, and Ane Katherine Gammelby, Talinn University, Estonia
12. Picture Me Naked. Embodying Images On Screen and Off
Tobias Bol, Johannes Gutenberg University, Germany
Work Cited
List of Contributors
Index
About the author
Katie Warfield is faculty in the Department of Journalism and Communication at Kwantlen Polytechnic University, Canada, and Director of the Visual Media Workshop. Her recent writings have appeared in Social Media + Society, Feminist Media Studies, Language and Literacy, and Feminist Issues, 6th ed. She teaches classes in communication theory, popular culture, discourse theory, media and diversity, and social media. Her research is located at the intersection of post-phenomenology, new materialism, digital literacy, and gender theory.Dr. Crystal Abidin is Professor and ARC DECRA Fellow in Internet Studies at Curtin University, and Director of the Influencer Ethnography Research Lab at Curtin University, Australia.Carolina Cambre is Assistant Professor of Education at Concordia University, Canada.
Summary
Images of faces, bodies, selves and digital subjectivities abound on new media platforms like Snapchat, Instagram, YouTube, and others—these images represent our new way of being online and of becoming socially mediated. Although researchers are examining digital embodiment, digital representations, and visual vernaculars as a mode of identity performance and management online, there exists no cohesive collection that compiles all these contemporary philosophies into one reader for use in graduate level classrooms or for scholars studying the field. The rationale for this book is to produce a scholarly fulcrum that pulls together scholars from disparate fields of inquiry in the humanities doing work on the common theme of the socially mediated body.
The chapters in Mediated Interfaces: The Body on Social Media represent a diverse list of contributors in terms of author representation, inclusivity of theoretical frameworks of analysis, and geographic reach of empirical work. Divided into three sections representing three dominant paradigms on the socially mediated body: representation, presentation, and embodiment, the book provides classic, creative, and contemporary reworkings of these paradigms.