The Social Construction of Media: Social Media, Culture, and Everyday LifeMain MenuIntroduction of Social MediaHistory and Statistics of Social Media UseOrigins of Memes: Contributors and CauseMemes have to come from somewhere, right? Where is it that they come from and why and how did they begin?Marketing and Entertainment in the Modern World of Social MediaSocial Media's Role in EducationUsage of social media for educational purposesSocial Media and ProfessionalismSocial Media's Role in PoliticsIntroductionSocial Media's Impact on JournalismHow Journalism has morphed into a new type of journalism with the use of social media.BibiliographyBibliographyAuthor BiosHere are a couple of bios of some of the authors that contributed to this book.David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674Digital Technology & Culture
Social Media Stereotypes
12016-10-19T09:01:21-07:00David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674118821Social Network Exampleplain2016-10-19T09:01:21-07:00David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674David Fincher's The Social Network (2010) tells a story of the birth of the social media industry, exposing the labor behind the culture of digital participation. Fittingly, it is a narrative that is obsessed with identity, particularly class identity but equally racial and ethnic identity. The Social Network is also full of Asian women, a fact that has been noted by Roger Ebert, one of the few film critics who can be counted on to see people of color in popular cinema, both in their presence and their absence. In his Chicago Sun-Times review Ebert notes how puzzling it is that the film depicts Asian women so promiscuously in both sense of the word--Christy and Alice, played by Brenda Song and Malese Jow, are depicted as sexually aggressive, approaching Mark and Eduardo during a lecture, asking them out for a drink, and eventually performing fellatio on Mark and Eduardo in adjoining stalls in a Cambridge pub bathroom--yet fails to give viewers a fuller picture of why they are so present yet so absent in this story of digital hypercapitalism. Ebert writes "A subtext the movie never comments on is the omnipresence of attractive Asian women. Most of them are smart Harvard undergrads, two of them (allied with Sean) are Victoria’s Secret models, one (Christy, played by Brenda Song) is Eduardo’s girlfriend." The film depicts Asian women as idle hands in the digital industry, valued and included only for their sexual labor as hypersexualized, exotic sirens. Alice and Christy are present at a key scene during which Zuckerberg assigns positions within Facebook's corporate hierarchy, but their offer to work at the fledgling company is rejected. This depiction of Asian women as sexual partners to the new captains of digital industries conceals their key roles within these industries as non-sexual workers. Asian women workers in China and Southeast Asia assembled the hardware that hosts our Facebook pages and the laptop computer that Zuckerberg used to produce Facebook's code. Depicting Asian women's labor as sexual rather than technical obscures rather than exposes the workers of color who "make" social media.
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12016-10-10T09:55:18-07:00David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674The Social Network - Asian Women3Early scenes from "The Social Network" (Sony, 2010) that highlight the roles of Asian women.plain2016-10-19T08:57:13-07:00Critical Commons2010VideoThe Social NetworkDavid Fincher2012-08-31T18:45:30ZDavid Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
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12016-10-19T09:05:25-07:00David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674Perceptions of Social MediaKendall A Mathews9Popular ideas about social media websitesplain2016-10-19T09:41:47-07:00Kendall A Mathews130d9aa3e687802f5db285f58bd8bc3731fa47b2