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Book Cover
Book
Author Morrison, Connie (Connie M.)

Title Who do they think they are? : teenage girls & their avatars in spaces of social online communication / Connie Morrison
Published New York : Peter Lang, [2010]
©2010

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'BOOL  302.231 Mor/Wdt  AVAILABLE
Description 246 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Series New literacies and digital epistemologies, 1523-9543 ; v. 40
New literacies and digital epistemologies ; v. 40
Contents Avatars, identity and autobiography : a theoretical perspective -- Making a WeeMee one click at a time -- The girls and their avatars : who do they think they are? -- That's not who I am today : making and remaking identity -- I can't find a thing to wear! : the pressure to look cool -- "Just a second of your life represented" : what avatars can and cannot do -- DIY : making avatars in English class
Summary Summary: "Who Do They Think They Are? Teenage Girls and Their Avatars in Spaces of Social Online Communication documents a descriptive case study of teenage girls who created autobiographical avatars for their social online spaces. It explores the complex and often conflicted negotiations behind girlhood identity and representation in a cyber-social world. Comparisons are drawn between autobiographical avatars and the profile pictures that teenage girls use on their social networking sites as they consider the manner in which identity is negotiated, constructed, co-authored, and represented. The contradictions and expectations of online social and popular culture make representations of identity simultaneously limitless and limiting for the girls who create them. Given the nature of the identity-defining and social act of creating an autobiographical avatar, a critical media literacy frame provides a pedagogical opportunity for bringing avatar construction into the secondary English language arts classroom. This book provides guidance for educators and researchers interested in the social construction of identity in an increasingly visual world, and will be valuable in courses ranging from literacy studies, media education, cultural studies, youth studies, educational research, teacher education, and popular culture to feminist, gender studies, and women's studies courses."--Publisher description
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Subject Avatars (Virtual reality) -- Psychological aspects.
Identity (Psychology) in adolescence.
Internet and teenagers -- Psychological aspects.
Online social networks -- Psychological aspects.
Teenage girls -- Psychology.
LC no. 2009018331
ISSN 1523-9543
ISBN 1433105527 (paperback: alk. paper)
9781433105524 (paperback: alk. paper)