Sexting, intimate and sexual media practices and social justice

Dobson argues for an orientation of research into intimate and sexual media practices around power and social justice. She frames intimate and sexual media practices in terms of their potential social and economic value, rather than in terms of risks and pathologies. Dobson, however, points to the l...

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Main Author: Dobson, Amy
Format: Book Chapter
Published: Springer 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/81133
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author Dobson, Amy
author_facet Dobson, Amy
author_sort Dobson, Amy
building Curtin Institutional Repository
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description Dobson argues for an orientation of research into intimate and sexual media practices around power and social justice. She frames intimate and sexual media practices in terms of their potential social and economic value, rather than in terms of risks and pathologies. Dobson, however, points to the limits of understanding sexting and other kinds of intimate media practices as ‘agentic media production’, through a careful consideration of research into girls’ and young women’s digital media cultures. To understand self and media production as an individual act is to ignore the ways in which it is socially and technically conditioned, she argues. A social justice orientation becomes imperative in a techno-social context where personal relations have been rapidly monetised through digital media platforms in ways that work to propose a new version of ‘the social’ centred around quantified hierarchies of visibility and status.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-811332021-01-25T04:32:52Z Sexting, intimate and sexual media practices and social justice Dobson, Amy Social Science Dobson argues for an orientation of research into intimate and sexual media practices around power and social justice. She frames intimate and sexual media practices in terms of their potential social and economic value, rather than in terms of risks and pathologies. Dobson, however, points to the limits of understanding sexting and other kinds of intimate media practices as ‘agentic media production’, through a careful consideration of research into girls’ and young women’s digital media cultures. To understand self and media production as an individual act is to ignore the ways in which it is socially and technically conditioned, she argues. A social justice orientation becomes imperative in a techno-social context where personal relations have been rapidly monetised through digital media platforms in ways that work to propose a new version of ‘the social’ centred around quantified hierarchies of visibility and status. 2018 Book Chapter http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/81133 10.1007/978-3-319-97607-5_6 Springer restricted
spellingShingle Social Science
Dobson, Amy
Sexting, intimate and sexual media practices and social justice
title Sexting, intimate and sexual media practices and social justice
title_full Sexting, intimate and sexual media practices and social justice
title_fullStr Sexting, intimate and sexual media practices and social justice
title_full_unstemmed Sexting, intimate and sexual media practices and social justice
title_short Sexting, intimate and sexual media practices and social justice
title_sort sexting, intimate and sexual media practices and social justice
topic Social Science
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/81133