Networked Masculinities and Social Networking Sites: A Call for the Analysis of Men and Contemporary Digital Media

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  • Ben Light Salford Universtiy

https://doi.org/10.4471/mcs.2013.34

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Abstract

It is of course recognised that technology is gendered and is implicated in gender relations. However, it continues to be the case that men’s experiences with technology are underexplored and the situation is even more problematic where digital media is concerned. Over the past 30 years we have witnessed a dramatic rise in the pervasiveness of digital media across many parts of the world and as associated with wide ranging aspects of our lives. This rise has been fuelled over the last decade by the emergence of Web 2.0 and particularly Social Networking Sites (SNS). Given this context, I believe it is necessary for us to undertake more work to understand men’s engagements with digital media, the implications this might have for masculinities and the analysis of gender relations more generally. To begin to unpack this area, I engage theorizations of the properties of digital media networks and integrate this with the masculinity studies field. Using this framework, I suggest we need to consider the rise in what I call networked masculinities - those masculinities (co)produced and reproduced with digitally networked publics. Through this analysis I discuss themes related to digital mediators, relationships, play and leisure, work and commerce, and ethics. I conclude that as masculinities can be, and are being, complicated and given agency by advancing notions and practices of connectivity, mobility, classification and convergence, those engaged with masculinity studies and digital media have much to contribute.

 

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Published

2013-10-21

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How to Cite

Light, B. (2013). Networked Masculinities and Social Networking Sites: A Call for the Analysis of Men and Contemporary Digital Media. Masculinities &Amp; Social Change, 2(3), 245–265. https://doi.org/10.4471/mcs.2013.34

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