The rise of the popular Internet has coincided with the increasing acceptance, even assimilation, of lesbians into mainstream society. The visible presence of lesbians in the tech industry and in digitally mediated spaces raises a set of questions about the relationship between queer identities and Internet technologies. This introduction to a special issue of Journal of Lesbian Studies explores some of these questions and provides an overview of the articles that follow
The queer Internet is a cultural formation, not a technological outcome. It bears the marks of chang...
This dissertation examines the expression of queer identity and community on the early internet and ...
The article discusses recent developments in media culture through one case study: The L-word, the f...
This chapter examines queer digital culture, a term that refers to the ways in which LGBTQ+ identiti...
The Velvet Light Trap gathered a diverse group of scholars with a range of specialties related to qu...
This introduction to the themed section ‘Queering Code/Space’ poses the question: what is the spatia...
Digital media offer spaces to many lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer people (LGBTQ+) fo...
This presentation includes a snapshot of the beginnings of the LGBT web-based communities. In parti...
The decline of the lesbian bar and the dawn of the digital age, combined with the lack of a suffici...
This article introduces a special issue concerning the interweaving of gender, sexuality, and social...
Research across the social sciences testifies to an ongoing relationship between queerness and digit...
During 2016, the same year news of lesbian bar closures hit mainstream media, a small cluster of Tum...
This dissertation explores how queer people use media technology to make and construe their identiti...
Prior research has documented the interactions between transgender and cisgender women-loving-women ...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
The queer Internet is a cultural formation, not a technological outcome. It bears the marks of chang...
This dissertation examines the expression of queer identity and community on the early internet and ...
The article discusses recent developments in media culture through one case study: The L-word, the f...
This chapter examines queer digital culture, a term that refers to the ways in which LGBTQ+ identiti...
The Velvet Light Trap gathered a diverse group of scholars with a range of specialties related to qu...
This introduction to the themed section ‘Queering Code/Space’ poses the question: what is the spatia...
Digital media offer spaces to many lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer people (LGBTQ+) fo...
This presentation includes a snapshot of the beginnings of the LGBT web-based communities. In parti...
The decline of the lesbian bar and the dawn of the digital age, combined with the lack of a suffici...
This article introduces a special issue concerning the interweaving of gender, sexuality, and social...
Research across the social sciences testifies to an ongoing relationship between queerness and digit...
During 2016, the same year news of lesbian bar closures hit mainstream media, a small cluster of Tum...
This dissertation explores how queer people use media technology to make and construe their identiti...
Prior research has documented the interactions between transgender and cisgender women-loving-women ...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
The queer Internet is a cultural formation, not a technological outcome. It bears the marks of chang...
This dissertation examines the expression of queer identity and community on the early internet and ...
The article discusses recent developments in media culture through one case study: The L-word, the f...