Pensum/læringskrav

Compendium

  • Nancy Baym: Personal connections in the digital age, chapter 1, pp. 1-21, Cambridge: Polity Press, 2010. (21 pages)
  • Michelle Wilson: The possibilities of Online Sociality, pp. 493-506 in Hunsinger, Klastrup & Allen (eds.): International Handbook of Internet Research; New York: Springer, 2010. (14 pages)
  • Danah Boyd (2015) It’s Complicated – the social lives of networked teens, “Introduction” + Chapter 1 “Identity”, pp. 1–5 (53 pages)
  • Diana Saco: “Wetware”, chapter 4, pp. 107-40 from Cybering Democracy, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. (34 pages)
  • Ian Burkitt: Social Selves, chapter 2, pp. 31-57, London: Sage, 2008. (27 pages)
  • Alison Kavanagh: Sociology in the Age of the Internet, chapter 9, pp. 120-31, Maidenhead: Open University Press, 2007. (12 pages)
  • Sherry Turkle: Life on the Screen, pp. 9-26 & 177-80. New York: Touchstone, 1995.
  • Diana Saco: “Theorizing Spaces”, chapter 1, pp. 1-34 from Cybering Democracy, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2002. (35 pages)
  • Debatin, Bernhard. “Ethics, Privacy, and Self-Restraint in Social Networking”. In S. Trepte and L. Reinecke (eds.), Privacy Online, pp. 47-60.
  • Balick, A. (2014), chapter 5: "Being in the mind of the other", in ibid., The Psychodynamics of Social Networking, London: Karnac, 101-127. (26 pages)
  • Alison Kavanagh: Sociology in the Age of the Internet, chapter 8, pp. 102-19, Maidenhead: Open University Press, 2007. (18 pages)

Online articles

  • E. Zaretsky (2015), "From Psychoanalysis to Cybernetics: The Case of Her", American Imago, 75/2, 197 210. (14 pages)
  • Natalie Boero (2012), “Proanorexia Communities and Online Interaction: Bringing the Pro-ana Body Online”, Body & Society, 18(2), 2757. (31 pages)
  • Blackman, Cromby, Hook, Papadopoulos and Walkerdine (2008), "Creating Subjectivities", Subjectivity, 22, 1–27. (28 pages)
  • Bereswill, Morgenroth, Redman (2010), "Alfred Lorenzer and the depthhermeneutic method", Psychoanalysis, Culture and Society, 15, 221–250. (30 pages)
  • Bakardjieva, M. and Gaden, G. 2012. Web 2.0 Technologies of the Self. Philosophy and Technology 25:399–413 (DOI 10.1007/s13347011-0032-9). (15 pages)
  • Ingrid Hölzl and Remi Mari: “Google Street View: navigating the operative image”, Visual Studies, 2014, Vol. 29, No. 3, 261–271. (11 pages)
  • Ulises Ali Mejias, “The limits of networks as models for organizing the social”, New Media & Society, 12(4), 603–617 (15 pages)
  • Tarleton Gillespie, “The Politics of Platforms”, New Media & Society, 2010 May, Vol.12(3), 347364. (18 pages)
  • Rob Shields, “Virtualities”, Theory, Culture & Society, 23 (23), 284–287. (4 pages)
  • danah boyd and Alice Marwick (2014), "Networked Privacy: How teenagers negotiate context in social media", New Media & Society, 16(7), 1051–1067. (18 pages)
  • Pedersen, S. (2014), “Is it Friday yet? Mothers talking about sex online”, Cyberpsychology: Journal of Psychosocial Research on Cyberspace, 8(2), article 4. doi: 10.5817/CP20142-4. (20 pages)
  • Vera King (forthcoming), ““If you show your real face, you’ll lose 10 000 followers” The Gaze of the Other and Transformations of Shame in Digitalized Relationships”, in: Jacob Johanssen and Steffen Krüger (eds.; forthcoming), Digital Media, Psychoanalysis and the Subject, special issue of: CM – Communication and Media. (19 pages – to be supplied!)
  • Niels van Doorn (2010), “Keeping it Real. UserGenerated Pornography, Gender Reification, and Visual Pleasure”, Convergence, 16(4): 411–430. (20 pages)
  • Steffen Krüger (2016), "Understanding Affective Labor Online – a depthhermeneutic reading of the My 22nd of July webpage", ephemera, TO BE SUPPLIED (23 pages)
  • Zizi Papacharissi (2012), "Without you I'm nothing: performances of the self on Twitter", International Journal of Communication, 6, 19892006. (18 pages)
  • Jose van Dijck (2013), “You have one identity: performing the self on Facebook and LinkedIn”, Media, Culture & Society, 35/2, 199215. (17 pages)
  • Vincent Miller (2008), “New Media, Networking and Phatic Culture”, Convergence, 14 (4). pp. 387400. (14 pages)
  • Bernie Hogan (2010), “The Presentation of Self in the Age of Social Media: Distinguishing Performances and Exhibitions Online”, Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2010, Vol.30(6), p.377386 (20 pages)
  • Jennifer StromerGalley and Alexis Wichowski: “Political Discussion Online”, in: M. Consalvo and C. Ess (eds), The Blackwell Handbook of Internet Studies, pp.168187, 2011. (20 pages)
  • Jodi Dean (2003), "Why the Net is not a Public Sphere", Constellations, 10/1: 95112. (19 pages)
  • John Hartley (2010), "Silly Citizenship", Critical Discourse Studies, 7/4, 233248. (15 pages)
  • Steffen Krüger (2015/16): “Names in online discussion forums – a psychosocial perspective”, Seachange – Art, Communication, Technology, no. 2015, 23–51. (28 pages)
  • Chris Rodley (2016): “When memes go to war: Viral Propaganda in the 2014 GazaIsrael Conflict”, The Fibreculture Journal, 27. (20 pages)
  • Ulises A. Mejias (2012): “Liberation Technology and the Arab Spring: From Utopia to Atopia and Beyond”, The Fibreculture Journal, 20. (20 pages)
  • Bakardjieva, Maria. 2009. “Subactivism: Lifeworld and Politics in the Age of the Internet”. The Information Society,25:2, 91—104. (15 pages)
  • Campbell, Heidi. 2011. “Internet and Religion”. In M. Consalvo and C. Ess (eds), The Blackwell Handbook of Internet Studies, pp. 232250. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell. (19 pages)
  • Ess, C. (2013), “Copying and Distributing via Digital Media: Copyright, Copyleft, Global Perspectives.” Ch. 3, Digital Media Ethics, 2nd edition. Oxford: Polity. TO BE SUPPLIED (40 pages)
  • Christian Fuchs (2012), “Dallas Smythe today The audience commodity, the digital labour debate, Marxist political economy and critical theory. Prolegomena to a digital labour theory of value”, tripleC: Communication, Capitalism and Critique, 10(2), pp.692740. (49 pages)
  • Steffen Krüger and Jacob Johanssen (2014), “Alienation and Digital Labour—A DepthHermeneutic Inquiry into Online Commodification and the Unconscious”, tripleC: Communication, Capitalism and Critique, 12(2), pp. 632647. (16 pages)
Published Dec. 9, 2016 2:15 PM - Last modified Jan. 23, 2017 9:51 AM