Critical Theory in a Digital Age, CCU, ENGL 483 2017Main MenuTheory, English 483, CCU, 2017Alisha Petrizzo, Reproducing a ClassicTaking a look at how film can enhance or distort the authenticity of its original literature formatJocie Scherkenbach, Real Identity in a Virtual World: How Social Media Affects IdentityUsing the idea of cyborgs, as defined by Donna Haraway's "Cyborg Manifesto" the comparison is made between these cyborgs and social media users and how the public and private space converge and diverge within these spaces in order to form new and differing identities than the real-world identity.Kaitlin Schell, Electracy in #BlackLivesMatter and #MeTooMainstream hashtags that represent a movement in the physical world are explored in terms of Gregory Ulmer's theory of electracy and connotations.Kayla Jessop, The Uncanny Valley: Observations on Cyborgs within the Film IndustryA scholarly observation on how film industries use Freud's idea of the uncanny and the uncanny valley within cyborgs and computer generated animation.Bilingualism Through An Electronic Hypertext and The Baroque Simulacrum it Creates By: Lindsey MorganBy: Lindsey MorganMarcus Kinley, The Uncanny in Flatliners (1990)Tiffany Hancock, The Panopticon of CommoditiesYaicha Ocampo - Marx's Favorite LatteThe relationship between the simulacrum and the fetish commodityLeila Hassak-Digital Labor Through The Dystopian Film Hunger GamesElizabeth Tabor, From 'Token Girl' To 'Leading Lady'How The Rise In Female Fans Affects Modern Popular CultureKyle Malanowski, The Uncanny WithinVictor Cocco , The Wonderfully Mysterious World of the UncannyIntroductionAriel Ellerson : The Public Sphere's Effect on Social Media and ChurchTiffany Whisenant, Cyborg ProsthesisLooking at how technology is used to augment ourselves and how technology becomes extensions of our body and soul.Jen Boyle54753b17178fb39025a916cc07e3cb6dd7dbaa99
1media/Gender background.png2017-12-04T22:01:04-08:00The relationship between gender identity and the commodity10image_header2017-12-14T19:57:34-08:00Gender identity is how individuals perceive themselves in regards to male, female, a blend of both or neither. One's gender identity can be the same or different from their sex assigned at birth.
Products are important in the external appearance of one's gender identity, which is usually expressed through clothing, hairstyle and voice.
Children are assigned a gender at birth, typically the gender correlating with their sex. Therefore, the imprinted gender biases from laborers onto products like toys reinforce that assignment.
This concept is not foreign – it has been decided that toys for girls are typically colored with pinks, purples and pastels, whereas toys for boys are deep shades of blue and green. A consumer could not find a Barbie doll displayed next to monster trucks and Nerf guns. This divide is significant because “consumers use key possessions to extend, expand, and strengthen their sense of self,” therefore the objects that we surround ourselves with help to construct our identity such as gender identity.