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About the author
Nicholas Carah is Director of the Centre for Digital Cultures & Societies and Professor in the School of Communication and Arts at The University of Queensland. He is also an Associate Investigator in the ARC Centre of Excellence for Automated Decision-Making and Society and leads the UQ node of the Australian Internet Observatory.
Nicholas is a UQ Teaching Fellow (2018–2019) and has been awarded the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Award for Teaching Excellence (2019) and The University of Queensland Award for Teaching Excellence (2020).
Nicholas’ research has been published in Media, Culture & Society, Cultural Studies, Social Media & Society, New Media & Society, Television & New Media, Convergence, Consumption, Markets & Culture and Mobile Media & Communication. He is the author of Brand Machines, Sensory Media and Calculative Culture (2016), Media and Society: Production, Content and Participation (2015) and Pop Brands: Branding, Popular Music and Young People (2010). He is the co-editor of Digital Intimate Publics and Social Media (2018) and Conflict in my Outlook (2022).
Sungyong Ahn is a Lecturer in Digital Media and Cultures in the School of Communication and Arts at The University of Queensland. Sungyong’s research investigates smart technologies and ontological issues their users encounter in the worlds where humans are less smart than machines. He has published in Big Data and Society, Journal of Cultural Economy, Technology in Society, International Journal of Communication, Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies, Postmodern Culture, and other journals on media and technologies. He is the author of Internet-ontologies-Things: Smart Objects, Hidden Problems, and their Symmetries (2023).
Amy Shields Dobson convenes the Digital and Social Media program at Curtin University and is Associate Professor in the School of Media, Creative Arts and Social Inquiry. Amy also leads the Digital Intimacies research stream in Curtin’s Centre for Culture and Technology (CCAT). They are an expert across gender and feminism, gendered subjectivities, youth, and social media. Amy has published widely on youth sexting, gendered representations in contemporary popular media and digital cultures, and contemporary feminine subjectivities. They are the author of Postfeminist Digital Cultures (2015), and editor of Digital Intimate Publics and Social Media with Nicholas Carah and Brady Robards (2018). Amy’s recent research projects include work on young people’s responses to #MeToo and gender violence awareness; facial image editing apps, body image, and selfies in youth cultures; and below-the-line youth-targeted alcohol and nightlife marketing on social media.
Summary
An urgent and compelling introduction that explores the relationship between meaning and power in an age of participatory culture, social media and digital platforms.