Bodies Online

Books & Chapters

  • Basílio Simões, R., & Amaral, I. (2022). Sexuality and self-tracking apps: Reshaping gender relations and sexual and reproductive practices. In E. Rees (Ed.), The Routledge companion to gender, sexuality and culture (eBook). Routledge.
  • Bishop, W. R., & Rigakos, B. N. (2024). Liberating fat bodies: Social media censorship and body size activism. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Enguix, B., & Ardévol, E. (2011). Enacting bodies: Online dating and new media practices. In K. Ross (Ed.), The handbook of gender, sex, and media (pp. 502-515). John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
  • Faust, G. (2017). Hair, blood and the nipple: Instagram censorship and the female body. In U. U. Frömming, S. Köhn, S. Fox, & M. Terry (Eds.), Digital environments: Ethnographic perspectives across global online and offline spaces (pp. 159–170). transcript Verlag.
  • Murray, P. R. (2018). Bringing up the bodies: The visceral, the virtual, and the visible. In E. Losh & J. Wernimont (Eds.), Bodies of information: Intersectional feminism and the digital humanities (pp. 185–200). University of Minnesota Press.
  • Nakamura, L. (2008). Avatars and the visual culture of reproduction on the web. In Digitizing race: visual cultures of the Internet (NED-New edition, pp. 131–170). University of Minnesota Press.
  • Oleszczuk, A., & Waszkiewicz, A. (2022). Body modifications and the limits of gender identity in video games. In E. Rees (Ed.), The Routledge companion to gender, sexuality and culture (eBook). Routledge.
  • Ray, A. (2007). Naked on the Internet. Da Capo Press.

Journal Articles

Other