Black Girl Autopoetics - Ashleigh Greene Wade

Black Girl Autopoetics

Agency in Everyday Digital Practice
Buch | Hardcover
176 Seiten
2024
Duke University Press (Verlag)
978-1-4780-2085-1 (ISBN)
98,50 inkl. MwSt
Ashleigh Greene Wade explores how Black girls create representations of themselves in digital culture, showing how Black girls’ self-making creatively reinvents cultural products, spaces, and discourse in digital space to navigate contemporary reality.
In Black Girl Autopoetics Ashleigh Greene Wade explores how Black girls create representations of themselves in digital culture with the speed and flexibility enabled by smartphones. She analyzes the double bind Black girls face when creating content online: on one hand, their online activity makes them hypervisible, putting them at risk for cyberbullying, harassment, and other forms of violence; on the other hand, Black girls are rarely given credit for their digital inventiveness, rendering them invisible. Wade maps Black girls’ everyday digital practices, showing what their digital content reveals about their everyday experiences and how their digital production contributes to a broader archive of Black life. She coins the term Black girl autopoetics to describe how Black girls’ self-making creatively reinvents cultural products, spaces, and discourse in digital space. Using ethnographic research into the digital cultural production of adolescent Black girls throughout the United States, Wade draws a complex picture of how Black girls navigate contemporary reality, urging us to listen to Black girls’ experience and learn from their techniques of survival.

Ashleigh Greene Wade is Assistant Professor of Media Studies and African American Studies at the University of Virginia.

Acknowledgments  ix
Introduction: Defining Black Girl Autopoetics  1
Interlude: On Developing Digital Ethics for/with Black Girls  19
1. Places to Be: Black Girls Mapping, Navigating, and Creating Spaces through Digital Practice  29
2. “You Gotta Show Your Life”: Reading the Digital Archives of Everyday Black Girlhood  61
3. “I Love Posting Pictures of Myself”: Hypervisibility as a Politics of Refusal  84
4. Making Time: Black Girls’ Digital Activism as Temporal Reclamation  105
Conclusion: What Does Black Girl Autopoetics Make Possible?  127
Notes  133
Bibliography  147
Index  157

Erscheinungsdatum
Zusatzinfo 16 page color insert
Verlagsort North Carolina
Sprache englisch
Maße 152 x 229 mm
Gewicht 408 g
Themenwelt Geschichte Teilgebiete der Geschichte Kulturgeschichte
Sozialwissenschaften Ethnologie
Sozialwissenschaften Kommunikation / Medien Medienwissenschaft
Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung Politische Theorie
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie
ISBN-10 1-4780-2085-7 / 1478020857
ISBN-13 978-1-4780-2085-1 / 9781478020851
Zustand Neuware
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