LGBTQ Digital Cultures: A Global Perspective
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Summary
- Help students understand digital media and digital cultures created, for, about or by queer and transgender people, activists, educators, and artists who work with or research ways to use digital means and measures to combat different forms of oppression, and explore self-expression and identity.
- Contributions are written by researchers, activists, and academics whose diverse international experiences as LGBTQ advocates and community workers have provided them with unique access and insights into this traditionally marginalized populace and their use of social media and digital technology.
- Examines questions of inclusion and, perhaps, more importantly, exclusions of certain voices and the different ways, age, race, class and disability intersect in specific social, cultural and global contexts throughout the collection.
- Encourages dialogue and investigation of the transformative potential of digital activism and platforms from a global perspective.
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- Help students understand digital media and digital cultures created, for, about or by queer and transgender people, activists, educators, and artists who work with or research ways to use digital means and measures to combat different forms of oppression, and explore self-expression and identity.
- Contributions are written by researchers, activists, and academics whose diverse international experiences as LGBTQ advocates and community workers have provided them with unique access and insights into this traditionally marginalized populace and their use of social media and digital technology.
- Examines questions of inclusion and, perhaps, more importantly, exclusions of certain voices and the different ways, age, race, class and disability intersect in specific social, cultural and global contexts throughout the collection.
- Encourages dialogue and investigation of the transformative potential of digital activism and platforms from a global perspective.
Paromita Pain is Assistant Professor of Global Media and Affiliate Faculty of the Cybersecurity Center at the University of Nevada, Reno. Her research focuses on alternate media and global journalism practices from feminist and LGBTQ perspectives. She has a particular interest in international communication and newsroom norms. She has researched journalism and news practices and LGBTQ activism in India, Taiwan, the USA, and Latin America.
Title: LGBTQ Digital Cultures: A Global Perspective
Author: Paromita, Pain
ISBN: 9781032050003
Binding:
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publication Date: 2022-03-16
Number of Pages: 294
Weight: 0.4361 kg
With chapters employing theoretical frameworks and methodological approaches from across the humanities and social sciences, and excavating the cultural particularities of a dozen countries, this volume offers a rich exploration of the powers and limits of digital media for queer world-making from a global perspective. This book will be an essential resource for students and scholars of LGBTQ media and culture alike.
Thomas J Billard, Assistant Professor of Communication Studies at Northwestern University and Executive Director of the Center for Applied Transgender Studies, USA
An important collection that theoretically and methodologically expands the current states of both LGBTQ Studies and Media and Communication Studies. It explicitly examines intersections among LGBTQ, digital media, and cultures. Most importantly, the chapters included take cutting-edge approaches to study contemporary issues and concerns in and across LGBTQ digital cultures.
Shinsuke Eguchi, Associate Professor of Communication, University of New Mexico, USA
LGBTQ Digital Cultures offers an important and much-need international framework for exploring the implications of contemporary digital media for queer and transgender people across the globe. The chapters bring critical new insights to discussions about digital activism, platform politics, and the ways that LGBTQ communities can be both empowered and disenfranchised by technology.
Bonnie (Bo) Ruberg, Assistant Professor, Film & Media Studies, University of California, Irvine, USA
A 'coming out' of scholarship about LGBTQIA+ identities on social media and digital platforms beyond US/Western perspectives is well overdue. Drawing from researchers, advocates, and activists, this volume provides a global, intersectional view of the ways that sexual and gender minorities engage in queer world-building, activism, and empowerment
Nikki Usher, Associate Professor, Department of Journalism, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, USA
This collection is an invaluable addition to the growing literature on trans and queer digital cultures. Spanning multiple world regions and including contributions from activists and academics, it offers unique intersectional and transnational perspectives on the paradoxical role that social media play for LGBTQ communities. In doing so, the book advances the much-needed project of dewesternisation and decolonisation of media and communication studies.
Lukasz Szulc, Lecturer in Digital Media and Society, University of Sheffield, UK
This edited volume dives into ambitious intersectional approaches which examine queer digital cultures and their productively messy overlaps with race, gender, disability, and national contexts. Dr. Paromita Pain and her contributors offer a refreshing, current, and much needed book that consistently foregrounds LGBTQIA+ lenses on digital and social media production, representation, and usage across the globe.
Stine Eckert, Associate Professor, Department of Communication, Wayne State University, USA
This powerful and timely collection of emerging and re-envisioned theories and studies from around the world is an important and critical contribution to scholarship centered on the influence of social and digital cultures on LGBTQ identity, advocacy work and expression. This compelling volume is truly intersectional in nature and offers scholars, students and other perspectives that are transformational.
Jeannine E. Relly, Professor, School of Government and Public Policy, Member of the Graduate Faculty, University of Arizona, USA
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