Selfies, sexts and sneaky hats: young people's understandings of gendered practices of self-representation

UNSW Sydney · Swinburne University of Technology

Indexed indatacite

Abstract

When is sexting not sexting? How do producers and sharers of naked and seminaked selfies negotiate and engage with broader cultural codes and conventions of sexed and gendered self- representation? This article draws on interviews conducted in 2012 with three mixed-sex groups of 16- and 17-year-olds in Sydney, Australia, as part of the Young People and Sexting in Australia project (Albury, Crawford, Byron, & Mathews, 2013). It focuses not on the images that might most easily be categorized as “sexts” (i.e., images intended to be exchanged within flirtations and intimate relationships) but on other, more ambiguous images, defined by participants as private selfies, public selfies, and a subgenre of joke…

Citation impact

122
total citations
FWCI
7.07
Percentile
100%
References
19
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Sociology
  • Negotiation
  • Gender studies
  • Representation (politics)
  • Human sexuality
  • Joke
  • Point (geometry)
  • Politics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Gender equality
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