Engagement with Master and Alternative Narratives of Gender and Sexuality Among LGBTQ+ Youth in the Digital Age

IF 2.2 3区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL
Logan L. Barsigian, Cyrus Howard, Anakaren Quintero Davalos, Abigail S. Walsh, A. Manago
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Abstract

Gender and sexuality are contentious political issues in the US, with a resurgence of traditional master narratives for gender following decades of advances for gender equality. To understand how today’s LGBTQ+ youth navigate this narrative landscape in a polymedia context, we conducted social media tour interviews with 20 LGBTQ+ adolescents (aged 16–19), recording audiovisual data as they guided us through important posts on their top three public social media platforms. Through reflexive thematic analysis, we found that our participants were engaging with both longstanding master narratives (e.g., traditional gender roles) and contemporary alternative narratives (e.g., gender as non-binary) using three key navigational strategies for engaging with narratives on social media platforms: seeking and sharing information, creating queer community, and making choices about visibility and permanence. The meaning and purpose of these strategies for participants, both individually and collectively, could not be fully understood apart from three key navigational contexts: the traditional gender narrative, white liberal community context, and platform affordances. Our results demonstrate that narrative engagement for contemporary LGBTQ+ adolescents is deeply influenced by personal polymedia environments, identity intersections, and power structures shaping possibilities for individual identity expression and collective cultural transformation.
数字时代LGBTQ+青年对性别和性的主叙事和另类叙事
在美国,性别和性是有争议的政治问题,在几十年的性别平等进步之后,传统的性别主流叙事死灰复燃。为了了解当今LGBTQ+青年如何在多媒体背景下驾驭这一叙事景观,我们对20名LGBTQ+青少年(16-19岁)进行了社交媒体巡回采访,记录了他们在三大公共社交媒体平台上引导我们发布重要帖子时的视听数据。通过反射性主题分析,我们发现我们的参与者使用三种关键的导航策略来参与社交媒体平台上的叙事:寻求和分享信息、创建酷儿社区、,以及对可见性和持久性做出选择。除了三个关键的导航背景:传统的性别叙事、白人自由主义社区背景和平台可供性,这些策略对参与者个人和集体的意义和目的都无法完全理解。我们的研究结果表明,当代LGBTQ+青少年的叙事参与深受个人多媒体环境、身份交叉和权力结构的影响,这些因素塑造了个人身份表达和集体文化转型的可能性。
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来源期刊
Journal of Adolescent Research
Journal of Adolescent Research PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL-
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
5.00%
发文量
34
期刊介绍: The aim of the Journal of Adolescent Research is to publish lively, creative, and informative articles on development during adolescence (ages 10-18) and emerging adulthood (ages 18-25). The journal encourages papers that use qualitative, ethnographic, or other methods that present the voices of adolescents. Few strictly quantitative, questionnaire-based articles are published in the Journal of Adolescent Research, unless they break new ground in a previously understudied area. However, papers that combine qualitative and quantitative data are especially welcome.
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