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This book is a critical and ethnographic study of camgirls: women
who broadcast themselves over the web for the general public while
trying to cultivate a measure of celebrity in the process. The
book's over-arching question is, «What does it mean for feminists
to speak about the personal as political in a networked society
that encourages women to 'represent' through confession, celebrity,
and sexual display, but punishes too much visibility with
conservative censure and backlash? The narrative follows that of
the camgirl phenomenon, beginning with the earliest experiments in
personal homecamming and ending with the newest forms of identity
and community being articulated through social networking sites
like Live Journal, YouTube, MySpace, and Face-book. It is grounded
in interviews, performance analysis of events transpiring between
camgirls and their viewers, and the author's own experiences as an
ersatz camgirl while conducting the research.
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