Talking Through Race: Two Raced Women’s Tinder Stories

While as an epitome of contemporary pairing culture Tinder has been reported as dangerous for its association with sex-centered post-feminist culture, including hook ups and toxic masculinity, an original case study exploring women of color (WOC) in the culture has not been undertaken yet. By inviti...

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Main Author: Lee, Jin
Format: Journal Article
Published: Wiley-Blackwell 2021
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/85426
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author Lee, Jin
author_facet Lee, Jin
author_sort Lee, Jin
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description While as an epitome of contemporary pairing culture Tinder has been reported as dangerous for its association with sex-centered post-feminist culture, including hook ups and toxic masculinity, an original case study exploring women of color (WOC) in the culture has not been undertaken yet. By inviting WOC Tinder users into an ethnographic study, I show the instability of race that mediates their lived experiences in line with gender in the culture of sexual intimacy. I focus on two female study participants living in the United States: Greek–Black biracial Betty and Korean-Asian Rose. By examining their processes of revisiting their Tinder episodes and developing their conclusive stories vis-à-vis their identities, I argue that they perform their race processed through ongoing negotiation with the social systems and their personal lived experiences, to respond to racialization, gendering, and sexualization in the pairing culture, mediated by the image-centered dating app, Tinder.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-854262021-11-10T06:01:55Z Talking Through Race: Two Raced Women’s Tinder Stories Lee, Jin While as an epitome of contemporary pairing culture Tinder has been reported as dangerous for its association with sex-centered post-feminist culture, including hook ups and toxic masculinity, an original case study exploring women of color (WOC) in the culture has not been undertaken yet. By inviting WOC Tinder users into an ethnographic study, I show the instability of race that mediates their lived experiences in line with gender in the culture of sexual intimacy. I focus on two female study participants living in the United States: Greek–Black biracial Betty and Korean-Asian Rose. By examining their processes of revisiting their Tinder episodes and developing their conclusive stories vis-à-vis their identities, I argue that they perform their race processed through ongoing negotiation with the social systems and their personal lived experiences, to respond to racialization, gendering, and sexualization in the pairing culture, mediated by the image-centered dating app, Tinder. 2021 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/85426 10.1093/ccc/tcab030 Wiley-Blackwell restricted
spellingShingle Lee, Jin
Talking Through Race: Two Raced Women’s Tinder Stories
title Talking Through Race: Two Raced Women’s Tinder Stories
title_full Talking Through Race: Two Raced Women’s Tinder Stories
title_fullStr Talking Through Race: Two Raced Women’s Tinder Stories
title_full_unstemmed Talking Through Race: Two Raced Women’s Tinder Stories
title_short Talking Through Race: Two Raced Women’s Tinder Stories
title_sort talking through race: two raced women’s tinder stories
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/85426