The rise of mum/mom/mommy bloggers has been a worldwide trend, with some mum bloggers now earning a significant income from their personal ‘brand’ and role as social media influencers. As ‘prosumers’ (i.e. consumers turned producers), successful mum bloggers are often courted by international brands and organisations. While mum bloggers were early adopters in the digital landscape, everyday (non-blogging) mums have also embraced technology and have become avid users of social media, in particular Facebook, and are sometimes influenced by the bloggers they follow. Invariably, as pro-am mothers, mumpreneur bloggers use their families (in particular, their young children) as characters in their story posts and also co-opt them in sponsorship a...
This article asks whether “sharenting” (sharing representations of one’s parenting or children onlin...
Pregnant people and parents engage with social media networking sites seeking support and informatio...
The study draws on the privacy paradox to explore to what extent selected British social media influ...
In the last 10 years, mum/mom/mommy blogging has become a global phenomenon, with mothers from China...
The rise of blogging mothers as precariat workers conducting ‘playbour’, a combination of play and l...
Sharenting (sharing parenting on social media) has become a widespread activity, and some of those...
© 2015 Springer Science+Business Media New York Introduction Various forms of social media are used ...
The use of social media by parents posting on their profiles content that concerns their own childre...
Digital technologies have opened up new environments in which the experiences of motherhood and moth...
© The Author(s) 2017. Following in the celebrity trajectory of mommy bloggers, global micro-microcel...
Alicia Blum-Ross reflects on ‘sharenting’ and blogging as increasingly accepted parts of parenthood,...
Childhood obesity is a worldwide health problem with a range of short- and long-term health and soci...
Following in the celebrity trajectory of mommy bloggers, global micro-microcelebrities, and reality ...
Many privacy concerns are related to influencer sharenting, or the practice of influencers sharing c...
The prominence of social media in contemporary life has led more mothers to search for parenting inf...
This article asks whether “sharenting” (sharing representations of one’s parenting or children onlin...
Pregnant people and parents engage with social media networking sites seeking support and informatio...
The study draws on the privacy paradox to explore to what extent selected British social media influ...
In the last 10 years, mum/mom/mommy blogging has become a global phenomenon, with mothers from China...
The rise of blogging mothers as precariat workers conducting ‘playbour’, a combination of play and l...
Sharenting (sharing parenting on social media) has become a widespread activity, and some of those...
© 2015 Springer Science+Business Media New York Introduction Various forms of social media are used ...
The use of social media by parents posting on their profiles content that concerns their own childre...
Digital technologies have opened up new environments in which the experiences of motherhood and moth...
© The Author(s) 2017. Following in the celebrity trajectory of mommy bloggers, global micro-microcel...
Alicia Blum-Ross reflects on ‘sharenting’ and blogging as increasingly accepted parts of parenthood,...
Childhood obesity is a worldwide health problem with a range of short- and long-term health and soci...
Following in the celebrity trajectory of mommy bloggers, global micro-microcelebrities, and reality ...
Many privacy concerns are related to influencer sharenting, or the practice of influencers sharing c...
The prominence of social media in contemporary life has led more mothers to search for parenting inf...
This article asks whether “sharenting” (sharing representations of one’s parenting or children onlin...
Pregnant people and parents engage with social media networking sites seeking support and informatio...
The study draws on the privacy paradox to explore to what extent selected British social media influ...