This article asks whether “sharenting” (sharing representations of one’s parenting or children online) is a form of digital self-representation. Drawing on interviews with 17 parent bloggers, we explore how parents define the borders of their digital selves and justify what is their “story to tell.” We find that bloggers grapple with profound ethical dilemmas, as representing their identities as parents inevitably makes public aspects of their children’s lives, introducing risks that they are, paradoxically, responsible for safeguarding against. Parents thus evaluate what to share by juggling multiple obligations – to themselves, their children in the present and imagined into the future, and to their physical and virtual communities. The d...
Posting about children on social media is common practice today, with adults acting as agents who m...
This paper examines how parents share photos, videos and information about their children on social ...
Technology and privacy are intertwined and often in conflict with each other. Nowhere is this more e...
Alicia Blum-Ross reflects on ‘sharenting’ and blogging as increasingly accepted parts of parenthood,...
Although parents consider online privacy important, they insouciantly include personal information a...
Through sharenting, or online sharing about parenting, parents now shape their children’s digital id...
This paper reports on findings from an exploratory study on social media dilemmas (SMDs) mothers exp...
ABSTRACT While extensive research has investigated the risks of children sharing their personal info...
“Sharenting” is a usual habit for families in the digital age. While media outlets describe parents ...
The coming together of parenting and routine posting on social networking sites has become a visible...
YesThe coming together of parenting and routine posting on social networking sites has become a visi...
Parents have accessed websites, online discussion forums and blogs for advice, information and suppo...
Parents actively share information about their children in online social networks such as Facebook a...
The sharenting practice, or the sharing of one’s parenting and children online, has become a popular...
Among the many concerns of social media, “sharenting,” or parents oversharing about their children o...
Posting about children on social media is common practice today, with adults acting as agents who m...
This paper examines how parents share photos, videos and information about their children on social ...
Technology and privacy are intertwined and often in conflict with each other. Nowhere is this more e...
Alicia Blum-Ross reflects on ‘sharenting’ and blogging as increasingly accepted parts of parenthood,...
Although parents consider online privacy important, they insouciantly include personal information a...
Through sharenting, or online sharing about parenting, parents now shape their children’s digital id...
This paper reports on findings from an exploratory study on social media dilemmas (SMDs) mothers exp...
ABSTRACT While extensive research has investigated the risks of children sharing their personal info...
“Sharenting” is a usual habit for families in the digital age. While media outlets describe parents ...
The coming together of parenting and routine posting on social networking sites has become a visible...
YesThe coming together of parenting and routine posting on social networking sites has become a visi...
Parents have accessed websites, online discussion forums and blogs for advice, information and suppo...
Parents actively share information about their children in online social networks such as Facebook a...
The sharenting practice, or the sharing of one’s parenting and children online, has become a popular...
Among the many concerns of social media, “sharenting,” or parents oversharing about their children o...
Posting about children on social media is common practice today, with adults acting as agents who m...
This paper examines how parents share photos, videos and information about their children on social ...
Technology and privacy are intertwined and often in conflict with each other. Nowhere is this more e...