Rebecca
Reyes
Wargo,
Jon M. “Every selfie tells a story: LGBTQ youth lifestreams and new media
narratives as connective identity texts.” New
Media & Society, Vol. 19, No. 4, 2015, pp. 560-577.
Summary:
Jon M. Wargo followed 3 LGBTQ high school students’ social
media accounts to analyze how their identity online combats/contrasts what
their identity is perceived as offline. Termed lifestreaming—“a rhetorical act
of streaming documents, texts, and visuals to curate an imagined and real
self”—these teenagers post material they feel embodies who their true selves
are while simultaneously combatting inequality (560). Wargo argues that social
media has turned digital photography in a literacy practice. Using think aloud sessions to discover the
reasoning and motivation behind their posts, Wargo discusses the effect that
their social media posts have on their own identity. For example, with Camille,
while walking down the hallways of the high school with Wargo, a group of boys
yelled out, “Look at that big Black butch!” (568). Although she told Wargo to
ignore their insults, she later posted on her social media account an image of
her nail polish collection, attempting to affirm her girly-girl self identity. On
the other hand, we have Zeke. He is a 6’1 African American male. Being gay, he
knows the stereotypes that come along with it such as being ‘flamboyant.”
Coming from a traditional family, their ideals on masculinity are constantly
being thrown at him. Thus, he does appear to attempt to separate himself from
the LGBTQ community, saying he’s “not one of those loud gays” who are “too
pink” (566). On his social media, he uploaded an image of his basketball
jersey, affirming his idea of ‘masculinity.’ Lastly, Jake is a transgender male
going through transition. He consistently posts images of his progress to give
his followers encouragement and proof that there can be success. Through social
media, digital photography, and their writings accompanying each post, these
teens either confirmed or combatted their offline identities by providing
counter-narratives. As LGBTQ youth, lifestreaming has opened up the opportunity
to provide “topographies of visual representation to write a self that felt
most real to them. Identitiesin which their sexuality and gender, alongside of
their youth status, were not peripheral to their everyday lives, but central”
(576).
Response:
Personally, I found Camille’s story fascinating. She may be
a high school student but she does what she can to use her social media as a
platform for identity creation and for social change. Living in a town where
homosexuality is still seen as something out of the ordinary, Camille tries to
find ways to educate those around her of political correctness. For example,
she started a blog in order to the use of words like “retard,” the use of “gay”
in the negative sense, “stupid,” or “ugly.” She explains to Wargo why she does
this: “Students just throw this language around like it doesn’t mean anything,
like they don’t realize who they’re hurting or what they’re really saying. And
everyone thinks it’s ok because everyone does it so often, but it’s not ok.
They’re ignorant” (570). I found that particularly profound for someone her
age. As a minority in sexual orientation, gender, and race, Camille understands
the way in which words and language can affect someone. With her own
experiences, she lifestreams, hoping to change the narrow views of those around
her. In another instance, Camille also writes about how she always gets asked,
“Who’s the girl and who’s the guy in the relationship?” That angers her.
Because it is an interracial relationship and Camille is physically bigger than
her girlfriend, people assume she is the ‘boy.’ However, Camille constantly
posts images, statuses, and blogs showing the femininity that both she and her
girlfriend possess in order to counter the idea that there must be a male and
female figure in the relationship. Lifestreaming is both an archive and an
outlet for political, social, and personal change. The moment someone posts a
selfie, a status, or blog, their story becomes accessible to the public.
Through this digital literacy practice, we see that “there’s an identity beyond
the physical body, we’re always unfinished” (573).
Quotations:
“LGBTQ youth use
digital tools to index a myriad of selves; selves that participants argued were
not centered in school and disavowed from in more formal learning spaces that
devalue these so-called techtual counter-economies” (561).
“Identities as
narratives are never created out of whole cloth, never uniquely individual, but
rather each narrative is a retelling, an act of social interaction, a
positioned intervention in the shared, contested narratives of a given culture”
(563).
“Through design and the
creation of artifactual techno-literacies, LGBTQ yyouth are composing in
digital environments to write and (re)present the fragmented self” (574).
It seems you've confirmed social media to be the vehicle for digital literacy, and I'm inclined to agree. When we take into account the inadequacy of language to encapsulate meaning, the presence of media to recreate perceptions broadens our understanding of the author's intent.
ReplyDeleteHow many aspects of the actor's identity would you say is revealed through through the combating of confirming of perceptions? I believe it can be reduced to one of either silence or voice. The interesting thing is that silence occurs through combat, voice through confirmation.
If an LGBTQ youth combats the narrative of the "big BLack butch" by posting a counter-narrative where she uses the femininity associated with finger nail polish, then she acquiesces to society's perception of femininity while simultaneously relinquishing her own. Confirmation produces, then, an inversion of that paradox.
Rebecca,
ReplyDeleteIt is heartbreaking to learn about the identity struggle these youths face, which seems to be created by the social contexts in which they find themselves in (school, society, family-life). It is incredibly unfortunate these youths do not feel comfortable being their “true” selves on social media and feel the need to display socially-accepted gender, racial, and sexual orientation identity traits.
Our society influences the perceptions of what is “accepted”, so there is a need to create awareness to increase social acceptance of all individuals regardless of their sexual orientation.
-Kimberly Ortega