Abstract
This paper investigates how young people give meaning to gender, sexuality, relationships, and desire in the popular social networking site (SNS) Netlog. In arguing how SNSs are important spaces for intimate politics, the extent to which Netlog is a space that allows contestations of intimate stories and a voicing of difference is questioned. These intimate stories should be understood as self-representational media practices; young people make sense of their intimate stories in SNSs through media cultures. Media cultures reflect how audiences and SNS institutions make sense of intimacy. This paper concludes that intimate stories as media practices in the SNS Netlog are structured around creativity, anonymity, authenticity, performativity, bricolage and intertextuality. The intimate storytelling practices focusing on creativity, anonymity, bricolage and intertextuality are particularly significant for a diversity of intimacies to proliferate.
©2015 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Articles
- Dimensions of diversity: Mapping the field of media and communication studies by combining cognitive and material dimensions
- Age differences in recall and liking of arousing television commercials
- Youth and intimate media cultures: Gender, sexuality, relationships, and desire as storytelling practices in social networking sites
- Advertising in social network sites – Investigating the social influence of user-generated content on online advertising effects
- Research in brief
- Bots or journalists? News sharing on Twitter
- Book Reviews
- Book Review
- Book Review
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Articles
- Dimensions of diversity: Mapping the field of media and communication studies by combining cognitive and material dimensions
- Age differences in recall and liking of arousing television commercials
- Youth and intimate media cultures: Gender, sexuality, relationships, and desire as storytelling practices in social networking sites
- Advertising in social network sites – Investigating the social influence of user-generated content on online advertising effects
- Research in brief
- Bots or journalists? News sharing on Twitter
- Book Reviews
- Book Review
- Book Review