A public view of private writing personal weblogs and adolescent girls /
Abstract (Summary)
Kristine Blair, Advisor
This dissertation examines the public and private nature of personal weblogs
written by adolescent girls. During a four-month observation period, the participants
continue to post material to their weblogs and the posts during that time are available
for examination and analysis. There is also an email interview and an end-of-study
questionnaire that lend an inside view to the process.
The reflection, collaboration, and mentoring that these blogs enable act as a
feminist space as well as a personal one uniquely qualified for investigating identity. At
the same time, the intersection of writing, introspection, and digital tools also lends the
possibility of answering another feminist goal, that is expressed in AAUW’s Tech Savvy
of bringing more girls to the sciences and to make them more comfortable in digital
spaces. I propose that identity development and the need for a space that is both public
and private may be behind the steady increase proportionately and numerically of
adolescent girls in the LiveJournal user base. From April 2004 to April 2005 the
increase has been steady, with the female user base rising from 65.2% to 67.3%, the
majority of those being between the ages of 15 and 21 as per the statistics on April 30,
2005. This indicates that a need is being filled and provides an important part of the
rationale for my study. It is significant also because by sheer numbers, adolescent girls
in personal weblogs are making the definition of what acceptable public discourse is
more diffuse and inclusive.
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To my mother, who never believed I was a C student, to my father, who didn't live to see
the end of this project, but never failed to believe it could be done, and especially to my
son and daughter, whose struggles and eventual successes with traditional schooling
will always inspire me to graciously look aslant for another way to succeed when the
road ahead looks impassable.
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Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:Bowling Green State University
School Location:USA - Ohio
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:teenage girls
ISBN:
Date of Publication: