Click and Kin
Transnational Identity and Quick Media
Herausgeber: Friedman, May; Schultermandl, Silvia
Click and Kin
Transnational Identity and Quick Media
Herausgeber: Friedman, May; Schultermandl, Silvia
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The essays in Click and Kin span the globe, examining transnational connections that touch in the United States, Canada, Mexico, India, Pakistan, and elsewhere.
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The essays in Click and Kin span the globe, examining transnational connections that touch in the United States, Canada, Mexico, India, Pakistan, and elsewhere.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 264
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. April 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 150mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 431g
- ISBN-13: 9781487519964
- ISBN-10: 1487519966
- Artikelnr.: 44004095
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 264
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. April 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 150mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 431g
- ISBN-13: 9781487519964
- ISBN-10: 1487519966
- Artikelnr.: 44004095
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Edited by May Friedman and Silvia Schultermandl
Introduction (May Friedman and Silvia Schultermandl)
Between the Individual and an Imagined Community
1. “I Talk to My Family in Mexico but I Don’t Know Them”: Undocumented
Young Adults Negotiating Belonging in the United States through
Conversations with Mexico (Laura E. Enriquez)
2. “Learning and Practicing Democracy”: Digital Diasporas and Negotiating a
Transnational Civil Society (M. Tina Zarpour)
3. Negotiating Everyday Conversation of South Asian Transnational
Identities in Social Media (Aparajita De and Shekh Moinuddin)
Shaping Identities
4. Queering “Web” Families: Cultural Kinship through Lesbian Web Series
(Julia Obermayr)
5. Literary Letters and IMs: American Epistolary Novels as Regulatory
Fictions (Silvia Schultermandl)
CyberAlternatives to Lived Identities
6. Digital Diasporic Experiences in Digital Queer Spaces (Ahmet Atay)
7. Claiming Ourselves as “Korean”: Accounting for Adoptees within the
Korean Diaspora in the United States (Kimberly McKee)
Disembodied Connections
8. Shifting Terrain: Exploring the History of Communication Through the
Communication of My History (May Friedman)
9. Love knows no bound: (Re)defining Ambivalent Physical Boundary and
Kinship in the World of ICTs (Isabella Ng)
10. The Internet Is Not A River: Space, Movement, and Relationality In A
Wired World (Samuel Veissiere)
Between the Individual and an Imagined Community
1. “I Talk to My Family in Mexico but I Don’t Know Them”: Undocumented
Young Adults Negotiating Belonging in the United States through
Conversations with Mexico (Laura E. Enriquez)
2. “Learning and Practicing Democracy”: Digital Diasporas and Negotiating a
Transnational Civil Society (M. Tina Zarpour)
3. Negotiating Everyday Conversation of South Asian Transnational
Identities in Social Media (Aparajita De and Shekh Moinuddin)
Shaping Identities
4. Queering “Web” Families: Cultural Kinship through Lesbian Web Series
(Julia Obermayr)
5. Literary Letters and IMs: American Epistolary Novels as Regulatory
Fictions (Silvia Schultermandl)
CyberAlternatives to Lived Identities
6. Digital Diasporic Experiences in Digital Queer Spaces (Ahmet Atay)
7. Claiming Ourselves as “Korean”: Accounting for Adoptees within the
Korean Diaspora in the United States (Kimberly McKee)
Disembodied Connections
8. Shifting Terrain: Exploring the History of Communication Through the
Communication of My History (May Friedman)
9. Love knows no bound: (Re)defining Ambivalent Physical Boundary and
Kinship in the World of ICTs (Isabella Ng)
10. The Internet Is Not A River: Space, Movement, and Relationality In A
Wired World (Samuel Veissiere)
Introduction (May Friedman and Silvia Schultermandl)
Between the Individual and an Imagined Community
1. “I Talk to My Family in Mexico but I Don’t Know Them”: Undocumented
Young Adults Negotiating Belonging in the United States through
Conversations with Mexico (Laura E. Enriquez)
2. “Learning and Practicing Democracy”: Digital Diasporas and Negotiating a
Transnational Civil Society (M. Tina Zarpour)
3. Negotiating Everyday Conversation of South Asian Transnational
Identities in Social Media (Aparajita De and Shekh Moinuddin)
Shaping Identities
4. Queering “Web” Families: Cultural Kinship through Lesbian Web Series
(Julia Obermayr)
5. Literary Letters and IMs: American Epistolary Novels as Regulatory
Fictions (Silvia Schultermandl)
CyberAlternatives to Lived Identities
6. Digital Diasporic Experiences in Digital Queer Spaces (Ahmet Atay)
7. Claiming Ourselves as “Korean”: Accounting for Adoptees within the
Korean Diaspora in the United States (Kimberly McKee)
Disembodied Connections
8. Shifting Terrain: Exploring the History of Communication Through the
Communication of My History (May Friedman)
9. Love knows no bound: (Re)defining Ambivalent Physical Boundary and
Kinship in the World of ICTs (Isabella Ng)
10. The Internet Is Not A River: Space, Movement, and Relationality In A
Wired World (Samuel Veissiere)
Between the Individual and an Imagined Community
1. “I Talk to My Family in Mexico but I Don’t Know Them”: Undocumented
Young Adults Negotiating Belonging in the United States through
Conversations with Mexico (Laura E. Enriquez)
2. “Learning and Practicing Democracy”: Digital Diasporas and Negotiating a
Transnational Civil Society (M. Tina Zarpour)
3. Negotiating Everyday Conversation of South Asian Transnational
Identities in Social Media (Aparajita De and Shekh Moinuddin)
Shaping Identities
4. Queering “Web” Families: Cultural Kinship through Lesbian Web Series
(Julia Obermayr)
5. Literary Letters and IMs: American Epistolary Novels as Regulatory
Fictions (Silvia Schultermandl)
CyberAlternatives to Lived Identities
6. Digital Diasporic Experiences in Digital Queer Spaces (Ahmet Atay)
7. Claiming Ourselves as “Korean”: Accounting for Adoptees within the
Korean Diaspora in the United States (Kimberly McKee)
Disembodied Connections
8. Shifting Terrain: Exploring the History of Communication Through the
Communication of My History (May Friedman)
9. Love knows no bound: (Re)defining Ambivalent Physical Boundary and
Kinship in the World of ICTs (Isabella Ng)
10. The Internet Is Not A River: Space, Movement, and Relationality In A
Wired World (Samuel Veissiere)