Coming Out Queer Online: Identity, Affect, and the Digital Closet (Lexington Studies in Communication and Storytelling)
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Product Description
The Digital Closet: LGBT*Q Identities and Affective Politics in a Social Media Age
discusses how LGBT*Q individuals occupy a precarious space within society as a marginalized community in the United States. They are afforded representation in some venues yet are often invisible. Through social media, LGBT*Q individuals have sought new ways to forge communities and increase their visibility. This rise in visibility afforded individuals means to seek out and distribute information to help in the coming out process. Combining archival research, observation, interviews, and visual discourse analysis of social media feeds, the Patrick Johnson examines the role social media plays in expressions of LGBT*Q politics, culture, and coming out. Despite the messages not having changed fundamentally, the improved access to LGBT*Q stories have amplified the ones that are sent. Johnson argues that this is positive in acting as intervention for LGBT*Q suicide rates, hate crimes, and discrimination from the outside. However, the author also contends that it has vastly re-centered and prioritized white, cisgender, masculinity, obscuring other stories and creating potentially dangerous environments for POC, women, trans* individuals, and gay men who do not meet this high standard of masculinity. Scholars of gender studies, media studies, and queer theory will find this book particularly interesting.
Review
Coming out Queer Online: Identity, Affect, and the Digital Closet addresses how difficult it can be for LGBT*Q+ people to come out online. Some may be scared of perceptions and how their family and loved ones may receive it.... [R]eaders will be able to see that there is representation with the LGBT*Q+ group and will be able to see how the digital age has helped change that for the better. ―
Communication Booknotes Quarterly\nThe Digital Closet: LGBT*Q Identities and Affective Politics in a Social Media Age
is a timely and important key text in the current political climate. This book advances ways of knowing about the significant role of media technologies that shape and reshape social and performative negotiations of LGBT*Q identities, performances, and politics. In addition, this book creates a space to rethink a constantly shifting idea of the LGBT*Q communities as the collective for the future as the hopeful destination. -- Dr. Shinsuke Eguchi, University of New Mexico\nWritten with a knack for clarity, Patrick Johnson offers an important read of social media discourses and their impact in the LBT*Q+ lifeworlds. This book offers us a way into an on-going conversation about the tense relationship between community ethics and LGBT*Q+ identity formation. Johnson’s multi-pronged, diverse, and dynamic approach to studying social media, exemplifies how this site of discourse is a wildly enriching and exclusionary platform. -- Jeffrey Q. McCune, Washington University in St. Louis
About the Author
Patrick M. Johnson
is assistant professor and program coordinator for the Department of Communication at Indiana University Northwest.
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