This paper explores an incident in which race and gender categories were mobilised on the Internet Mailing List Cybermind during an incident of conflict. The people on this Mailing List would resist easy classification as ‘racist’, yet race proved an issue of fracture, while gender appeared to function as a way of universalising sameness and attempting integration. The process of cultural construction is shown to involve the rhetorical deployment of categories, and deployment of these categories often makes sites of ‘expertise’, which become justifiers and motivators of behaviour. This suggests that cultural barriers are not so much latent but created in response to crisis and debate. Competitions between multiple viewpoints, uneasy truce, ...
In this article we analyse the emergence of Internet activity addressing the experiences of young pe...
In this article we analyse the emergence of Internet activity addressing the experiences of young pe...
Race and gender become even more abstract in the disembodied presence they inhabit online. This arti...
This paper explores an incident in which race and gender categories were mobilised on the Internet M...
This paper takes the position that identity is not located in the individual but in the community in...
The primary objective of this journal issue is to compile a collection of writings that present a mu...
This issue of the Transforming Cultures eJournal concludes the publications arising from an Australi...
The account of gender on the Cybermind Mailing List is furthered by presentation of data and discuss...
How is intimacy produced within digitally enabled communication platforms such as the mailing list? ...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis is an ethnographic study of the process of commu...
In this paper, I contribute to the “new cultural politics of difference” by focusing on modern, orga...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis is an ethnographic study of the process of commu...
The Internet representsapowerful tool for racist groups toachieve their collective goals –i.e., diss...
The Internet representsapowerful tool for racist groups toachieve their collective goals –i.e., diss...
© The Royal Society of NSW. Complex multicultural societies hold together through effective and inte...
In this article we analyse the emergence of Internet activity addressing the experiences of young pe...
In this article we analyse the emergence of Internet activity addressing the experiences of young pe...
Race and gender become even more abstract in the disembodied presence they inhabit online. This arti...
This paper explores an incident in which race and gender categories were mobilised on the Internet M...
This paper takes the position that identity is not located in the individual but in the community in...
The primary objective of this journal issue is to compile a collection of writings that present a mu...
This issue of the Transforming Cultures eJournal concludes the publications arising from an Australi...
The account of gender on the Cybermind Mailing List is furthered by presentation of data and discuss...
How is intimacy produced within digitally enabled communication platforms such as the mailing list? ...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis is an ethnographic study of the process of commu...
In this paper, I contribute to the “new cultural politics of difference” by focusing on modern, orga...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis is an ethnographic study of the process of commu...
The Internet representsapowerful tool for racist groups toachieve their collective goals –i.e., diss...
The Internet representsapowerful tool for racist groups toachieve their collective goals –i.e., diss...
© The Royal Society of NSW. Complex multicultural societies hold together through effective and inte...
In this article we analyse the emergence of Internet activity addressing the experiences of young pe...
In this article we analyse the emergence of Internet activity addressing the experiences of young pe...
Race and gender become even more abstract in the disembodied presence they inhabit online. This arti...