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Spaces, be they online or offline; private or public; physical, augmented or virtual; or of a hybrid nature, present the performative realms through which one's sense of self is articulated, actualized, presented and representedThis volume focuses on how digital media platforms support, enhance, or confine the networked self and the stories participants tell about themselves and the world around them. Contributors examine a range of issues relating to storytelling, platforms, and the self, including the live-reporting of events, the curation of information, emerging modalities of journalism, collaboratively formed memories, and the instant historification of the present.
List of contents
Introduction
Zizi Papacharissi
The Networked Self in the Age of Identity Fundamentalism
Daniel Kreiss
News and the Networked Self: Performativity, Platforms, and Journalistic Epistemologies
Matt Carlson and Seth C. Lewis
Publicness on Platforms: Tracing the mutual articulation of platform architectures and user practices
Thomas Poell, Sudha Rajagopalan, and Anastasia Kavada
The Bot Proxy: Designing Automated Self Expression
Samuel Woolley, Samantha Shorey, and Philip Howard
The Emotional Architecture of Social Media
Karin Wahl-Jorgensen
"The more I look like Justin Bieber in the pictures, the better": Queer women’s self-representation on Instagram
Stefanie Duguay
Affective Mobile Spectres: Understanding the Lives of Mobile Media Images of the Dead
Larissa Hjorth and Kathleen M. Cumiskey
Cleavage-control: Stories of algorithmic culture and power in the case of the YouTube ‘Reply Girls’.
Taina Bucher
From networked to quantified self: Self-tracking and the moral economy of data
Aristea Fotopoulou
‘Doing’ Local: Place-Based Travel Apps and the Globally Networked Self
Erika Polson
The Networked Self and Defense of Privacy: Reading Surveillance Fiction in the Wake of the Snowden Revelations
Adrienne Russell and Risto Kunelius
Mobile Media Stories and the Process of Designing Contested Landscapes
Jason Farman
About the author
Zizi Papacharissi is Professor and Head of the Communication Department and Professor of Political Science at the University of Illinois-Chicago, and University Scholar at the University of Illinois System. Her work focuses on the social and political consequences of online media. She has published nine books, including
Affective Publics,
A Private Sphere,
A Networked Self: Identity, Community, and Culture on Social Network Sites (Routledge, 2010) and over 60 journal articles, book chapters and reviews. She is the founding and current editor of the open access journal
Social Media and Society.