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Abstract
"This comprehensive text explores the relationship between identity, subjectivity and digital communication, providing a strong starting point for understanding how fast-changing communication technologies, platforms, applications and practices have an impact on how we perceive ourselves, others, relationships and bodies. Drawing on critical studies of identity, behaviour and representation, Identity and Digital Communication demonstrates how identity is shaped and understood in the context of significant and ongoing shifts in online communication. Chapters cover a range of topics including advances in social networking, the development of deepfake videos, intimacies of everyday communication, the emergence of cultures based on algorithms, the authenticities of TikTok, and online communication's setting as a site for hostility and hate speech. Throughout the text, author Rob Cover shows how the formation and curation of self-identity is increasingly performed and engaged with through digital cultural practices, affirming that these practices must be understood if we are to make sense of identity in the 2020s and beyond. Featuring critical accounts, everyday examples, and analysis of key platforms such as TikTok, this textbook is an essential primer for scholars and students in media studies, psychology, cultural studies, sociology, anthropology, computer science, as well as health practitioners, mental health advocates and community members"--
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgements -- 1 Identities: Subjectivity and Selfhood in a Digital World -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.1.1 Identity and Digital Cultures -- 1.1.2 About this Book -- 1.2 Making Sense of Identity -- 1.2.1 The Origins of an Idea of Identity -- 1.2.2 Marxist Accounts of Identity -- 1.2.3 Psychoanalysis and the Unconscious -- 1.2.4 Constructionist and Postmodern Approaches -- 1.2.5 Foucault, Institutions and Disciplinary Norms -- 1.2.6 Judith Butler and Performativity -- 1.2.7 Using Theories of Identity -- 1.3 Early Internet and the Idea of Identity Online -- 1.4 The Changing Digital World -- 1.4.1 Web 2.0 -- 1.4.2 Collapsing the Real/virtual Divide -- 1.5 Angles of Identity -- Key Points -- References -- 2 Interactivities: Performativity, Social Media and Online Participation -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Participatory Digital Creativity -- 2.2.1 What Is Interactivity? -- 2.2.2 Participatory Digital Creativity -- 2.2.3 Discerning Interactivity and Participation By Type -- 2.2.4 Interactivity and the Author-text-audience Relationship: Synergy and Struggle -- 2.2.5 Push-And-Pull: Audience Interactivity in History -- 2.2.6 Identity and Interactivity -- 2.3 Identity Performativity and Social Media Profiles -- 2.3.1 Social Media and the Performativity of Identity -- 2.3.2 Interacting Across the Social Network -- 2.4 Complexifying Identity On Social Media -- 2.4.1 Commentaries -- 2.4.2 Disrupting the Past: the Archive -- 2.4.3 Tagging -- 2.5 Conclusion -- Key Points -- References -- 3 Bodies: Digital Corporeality and Identity -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Defining the Body -- 3.2.1 Digital Identities Without Bodies? Never -- 3.3 Representing Bodies On the Digital Screen -- 3.3.1 Stereotypes: Image, Movement and Categories of Discrimination.
Zugriffsoptionen:
Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
"This comprehensive text explores the relationship between identity, subjectivity and digital communication, providing a strong starting point for understanding how fast-changing communication technologies, platforms, applications and practices have an impact on how we perceive ourselves, others, relationships and bodies. Drawing on critical studies of identity, behaviour and representation, Identity and Digital Communication demonstrates how identity is shaped and understood in the context of significant and ongoing shifts in online communication. Chapters cover a range of topics including advances in social networking, the development of deepfake videos, intimacies of everyday communication, the emergence of cultures based on algorithms, the authenticities of TikTok, and online communication's setting as a site for hostility and hate speech. Throughout the text, author Rob Cover shows how the formation and curation of self-identity is increasingly performed and engaged with through digital cultural practices, affirming that these practices must be understood if we are to make sense of identity in the 2020s and beyond. Featuring critical accounts, everyday examples, and analysis of key platforms such as TikTok, this textbook is an essential primer for scholars and students in media studies, psychology, cultural studies, sociology, anthropology, computer science, as well as health practitioners, mental health advocates and community members"--
Zugriffsoptionen:
Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext: