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Instant Identity - Adolescent Girls and the World of Instant Messaging (Paperback, illustrated edition): Shayla Thiel Stern Instant Identity - Adolescent Girls and the World of Instant Messaging (Paperback, illustrated edition)
Shayla Thiel Stern
R1,025 Discovery Miles 10 250 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Instant Identity: Adolescent Girls and the World of Instant Messaging explains how girls use instant messaging - a primary mode of new media communication for their generation - in order to flirt, bond, fight, and generally relate to peers in ways that both transcend and play into their culture's dominant gender norms. Examining IM conversations and interviews with the girls, Shayla Thiel Stern demonstrates exactly how girls use IM to construct identity and negotiate sexuality, as they constantly move between childhood and adulthood in their language and actions online. This book is among the first of its kind to truly explore the millennial generation's prevalent use of instant messaging and its implications for the future.

From the Dance Hall to Facebook - Teen Girls, Mass Media, and Moral Panic in the United States, 1905-2010 (Paperback): Shayla... From the Dance Hall to Facebook - Teen Girls, Mass Media, and Moral Panic in the United States, 1905-2010 (Paperback)
Shayla Thiel Stern
R834 R725 Discovery Miles 7 250 Save R109 (13%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

From the days of the penny press to the contemporary world of social media, journalistic accounts of teen girls in trouble have been a mainstay of the U.S. news media. Often the stories represent these girls as either victims or whores (and sometimes both), using journalistic storytelling devices and news-gathering practices that question girls' ability to perform femininity properly, especially as they act in public recreational space. These media accounts of supposed misbehavior can lead to moral panics that then further silence the voices of teenagers and young women.

In From the Dance Hall to Facebook, Shayla Thiel-Stern takes a close look at several historical snapshots, including working-class girls in dance halls of the early 1900s; girls' track and field teams in the 1920s to 1940s; Elvis Presley fans in the mid-1950s; punk rockers in the late 1970s and early 1980s; and girls using the Internet in the early twenty-first century. In each case, issues of gender, socioeconomic status, and race are explored within their historical context. The book argues that by marginalizing and stereotyping teen girls over the past century, mass media have perpetuated a pattern of gendered crisis that ultimately limits the cultural and political power of the young women it covers.

From the Dance Hall to Facebook - Teen Girls, Mass Media, and Moral Panic in the United States, 1905-2010 (Hardcover): Shayla... From the Dance Hall to Facebook - Teen Girls, Mass Media, and Moral Panic in the United States, 1905-2010 (Hardcover)
Shayla Thiel Stern
R2,313 Discovery Miles 23 130 Out of stock

From the days of the penny press to the contemporary world of social media, journalistic accounts of teen girls in trouble have been a mainstay of the U.S. news media. Often the stories represent these girls as either victims or whores (and sometimes both), using journalistic storytelling devices and news-gathering practices that question girls' ability to perform femininity properly, especially as they act in public recreational space. These media accounts of supposed misbehavior can lead to moral panics that then further silence the voices of teenagers and young women.

In From the Dance Hall to Facebook, Shayla Thiel-Stern takes a close look at several historical snapshots, including working-class girls in dance halls of the early 1900s; girls' track and field teams in the 1920s to 1940s; Elvis Presley fans in the mid-1950s; punk rockers in the late 1970s and early 1980s; and girls using the Internet in the early twenty-first century. In each case, issues of gender, socioeconomic status, and race are explored within their historical context. The book argues that by marginalizing and stereotyping teen girls over the past century, mass media have perpetuated a pattern of gendered crisis that ultimately limits the cultural and political power of the young women it covers.

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