News & Resources

Books

Digital intimate public and social spaces Digital culture

Articles

Andrejevic, Mark 2019, 'Automating surveillance', Surveillance & Society, Vol 17, No 1/2.

Dwyer, Tessa, Kanai, Akane, Pfefferkorn, Jasmin, Fan, Jiali & Lambert, Alexamder 2021, Media Comforts and International Student Mobility: Managing  Hopes, Host and Home, Journal of Intercultural Studies

Flynn, Asher & Henry, Nicola 2019, Image-Based Sexual Abuse: An Australian Reflection, Women & Criminal Justice

Moran, Claire & Gatwiri, Kathomi 2022, #BlackLivesMatter: exploring the digital practises of African Australian youth on social media, Media, Culture and Society

Robards, Brady, Lyall, Ben & Moran, Claire 2021, Confessional data selfies and intimate digital traces, New Media & Society

Roberts, Steven &  Ravn, Signe 2019, 'Towards a sociological understanding of sexting as a social practice: A case study of university undergraduate men', Sociology.

Roh, Jaekyung & Kanai, Akane 2021, Disclosing Racism, Awareness-Raising and Seeking Support: Korean Women Migrants' use of Online Cafes, Journal of Intercultural Studies

Trott, Verity, Li, Nina, Fordyce, Robbie & Andrejevic, Mark 2021, Shedding light on 'dark' ads, Continuum

van de Nagel, Emily 2018, 'Alts and automediality: Compartmentalising the self through multiple social media profiles', MC Journal, Vol 21, No 2.

Reports

Online discussion, not to mention online disagreement, can be highly fraught. This fact sheet sets out some principals and tips for navigating the diverse and different views that we can often encounter online in shared political spaces (Kanai, 2021)

Interviews

Download This Show, 2021, Could OnlyFans be a refuge for nude art? Interview with Dr Emily van der Nagel

One World, One Network 2021, Decentralizing Western Research from Being “A Universalizing Norm?” featuring Dr Akane Kanai

The Guardian 2022, Chinese -speaking voters critical of Coalition's 'militaristic' stance on China in lead-up to 2022 election, WeChat study shows

ABC Life Matters, 2020, Growing up on Facebook Interview with Dr Brady Robards

Millennials have grown up on Facebook. Through birthdays, graduations and break-ups, the social media network has seen it all. Now, those complex personal histories are readily available in just a few clicks. So what are the implications when a social media platform holds the key to our memories? (Robards, 2020)