This doctoral thesis examines the current phenomenon of highly assertive, heterosexualised, individualised and often ‘traditionally unfeminine’ self-presentation by Australian young women on MySpace. The study is based on a sample of 45 public MySpace profiles owned by Australian women. The profiles were initially accessed between September 2007 and February 2008, and the owners were aged between 18 and 21 at that time. My research project is to see how some feminist conceptions of object/subject positions in representation apply to the MySpace representations when we view them as ‘self-produced’ and ‘freely chosen’ performative displays. I draw primarily from the disciplines of feminist media and performance studies. Such an analysis also ...
This inquiry shows how youths negotiate sexualities and gender when commenting on profile pictures o...
Social network sites like MySpace and Facebook are a popular online venue for interaction and expres...
This paper explores the contradictory framing of young women’s social networking use in public and m...
Graduation date: 2009MySpace is a social network phenomenon with over 100 million profiles\ud and a ...
In this paper, I ask what the self-representations of young women on social network sites can tell u...
In a textual analysis of public social network site (SNS) profiles owned by young women aged between...
In this paper, I ask what the self-representations of young women on social network sites can tell u...
While many composition scholars have eagerly embraced the promise of computers and other technologie...
In social media communities dedicated to women's leisure reading and literary fandom, images of wome...
Although the body of research on social network sites (SNSs) continues to increase, scholarship in t...
The thesis examines how the logic of misogyny and post-feminism has perpetuated the negotiations of ...
This article explores some popular constructions of young femininity on MySpace profiles through an ...
Using a uniquely developed research methodology called ‘feminist virtual ethnography’ this thesis ex...
In recent years, the position of (post-)millennial girls and young women within the digital landscap...
This doctoral thesis examines youthful femininities in an intimate public on the blogging platform T...
This inquiry shows how youths negotiate sexualities and gender when commenting on profile pictures o...
Social network sites like MySpace and Facebook are a popular online venue for interaction and expres...
This paper explores the contradictory framing of young women’s social networking use in public and m...
Graduation date: 2009MySpace is a social network phenomenon with over 100 million profiles\ud and a ...
In this paper, I ask what the self-representations of young women on social network sites can tell u...
In a textual analysis of public social network site (SNS) profiles owned by young women aged between...
In this paper, I ask what the self-representations of young women on social network sites can tell u...
While many composition scholars have eagerly embraced the promise of computers and other technologie...
In social media communities dedicated to women's leisure reading and literary fandom, images of wome...
Although the body of research on social network sites (SNSs) continues to increase, scholarship in t...
The thesis examines how the logic of misogyny and post-feminism has perpetuated the negotiations of ...
This article explores some popular constructions of young femininity on MySpace profiles through an ...
Using a uniquely developed research methodology called ‘feminist virtual ethnography’ this thesis ex...
In recent years, the position of (post-)millennial girls and young women within the digital landscap...
This doctoral thesis examines youthful femininities in an intimate public on the blogging platform T...
This inquiry shows how youths negotiate sexualities and gender when commenting on profile pictures o...
Social network sites like MySpace and Facebook are a popular online venue for interaction and expres...
This paper explores the contradictory framing of young women’s social networking use in public and m...