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LGBTQ youth cultures and social media

LGBTQ youth cultures and social media
LGBTQ youth cultures and social media
Research has established that access to the Internet and social media is vital for many lesbian, gay, bi, trans, queer + (LGBTQ+) young people. LGBTQ+ social media youth cultures form across platforms and are shaped by a range of media affordances and vernaculars. LGBTQ+ youth use social media for self-expression, connecting with other LGBTQ+ young people, entertainment, activism, and collecting and curating information. Through a digital cultural studies approach, the essay discusses themes of LGBTQ+ youth identity work, communities and networked publics, and youth voice to explore how digital and social media imaginaries and practices produce new forms of socialites. It situates LGBTQ+ youth social media practices in relation to the affective economy and algorithmic exclusion of platforms, as well as in relation to neoliberal paradigms of gender and sexuality and homotolerance.
Oxford University Press
Jenzen, Olu
ea2f2c5f-197f-4595-8f38-0548817bf25b
Jenzen, Olu
ea2f2c5f-197f-4595-8f38-0548817bf25b

Jenzen, Olu (2022) LGBTQ youth cultures and social media. In, Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Communication. Oxford University Press. (doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780190228613.013.1363).

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

Research has established that access to the Internet and social media is vital for many lesbian, gay, bi, trans, queer + (LGBTQ+) young people. LGBTQ+ social media youth cultures form across platforms and are shaped by a range of media affordances and vernaculars. LGBTQ+ youth use social media for self-expression, connecting with other LGBTQ+ young people, entertainment, activism, and collecting and curating information. Through a digital cultural studies approach, the essay discusses themes of LGBTQ+ youth identity work, communities and networked publics, and youth voice to explore how digital and social media imaginaries and practices produce new forms of socialites. It situates LGBTQ+ youth social media practices in relation to the affective economy and algorithmic exclusion of platforms, as well as in relation to neoliberal paradigms of gender and sexuality and homotolerance.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 19 October 2022

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Local EPrints ID: 488486
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488486
PURE UUID: d5635c88-14a0-4c45-9464-1195e2783c38

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Date deposited: 22 Mar 2024 18:41
Last modified: 22 Mar 2024 19:08

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Author: Olu Jenzen

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