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
Atuk, S., & Cole, A. (2024). Bodies on the line vs. bodies online: A feminist phenomenology of digitally mediated political action. Women’s Studies in Communication, 47(1), 63-86. Taylor & Francis Online. https://doi.org/10.1080/07491409.2023.2297288.
Connell, C. (2012). Fashionable resistance: Queer “fa(t)shion” blogging as counterdiscourse. Women’s Studies Quarterly, 41(1-2), 209-224. https://www.jstor.org/stable/23611784
Malone, M. E. (2022). Expression of the embodiment contradiction in Natalie Wynn’s ContraPoints video, Beauty. Computers and Composition, 63. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compcom.2022.102696
Marston, K. (2024). Young people’s digitally-networked bodies: the changing possibilities of what a gendered body can be, do and become online. Journal of Gender Studies, 33(5), 497-511. https://doi.org/10.1080/09589236.2023.2172555
Nichols, E., Pavlidis, A., & Nowak, R. (2024). “It’s like lifting the power”: Powerlifting, digital gendered subjectivities, and the politics of multiplicity. Leisure Sciences, 46(3), 254-273. https://doi.org/10.1080/01490400.2021.1945982
Omry, K. (2016). Bodies and digital discontinuities: Posthumanism, fractals, and popular music in the digital age. Science Fiction Studies, 43(1), 104–122. https://doi.org/10.5621/sciefictstud.43.1.0104
Shah, N. (2015). The selfie and the slut: Bodies, technology and public shame. Economic and Political Weekly, 50(17), 86–93. http://www.jstor.org/stable/24481830
Shuilleabhain, N. N., Rich, E., & Fullagar, S. (2021). Rethinking digital media literacy to address body dissatisfaction in schools: Lessons from feminist new materialisms. New Media & Society, 25(12), 3247-3265. https://doi.org/10.1177/14614448211041715
Song, F. W, West, J. E., Lundy, L., & Dahmen, N. S. (2012). Women, pregnancy, and health information online: The making of informed patients and ideal mothers. Gender and Society, 26(5), 773-798. https://www.jstor.org/stable/41705725
Toffoletti, K., Olive, R., Thorpe, H., & Pavlidis, A. (2020). Doing feminist physical cultural research in digital spaces: reflections, learnings and ways forward. Qualitative Research in Sport, Exercise and Health, 13(1), 11–25. https://doi.org/10.1080/2159676X.2020.1836513