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Public Lecture at UEL on 8 March at 5:30pm

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--PLEASE PASS ON TO INTERESTED PARTIES--

Hello, friends in London!

I wanted to invite folks to join me next Tuesday at the University of East London Public Lecture Series, where I am giving a talk about--among other thing-- half-naked young girls on the internet.

Because it's the sort of conversation that's best had in the presence of people under the age of 45, I hope students especially come for the lecture and join in the dialogue afterwards. (I could probably also visit a class or two briefly to talk, if that’s of interest to anyone; this is a topic I never seem to lose interest in...)

Here are some details about the lecture:

PUBLIC LECTURE SERIES TITLE:

“From Personal Property to Speaking Subjects: Youth, Gender, and the Right to Credit in an Attention  Economy.”


SPEAKER: Dr. Theresa Senft, Senior Lecturer, Media Studies, UEL

Date: Tuesday 9 March 2010          Time: 17:30

Venue: West Building G.02

(next to Oscars) University of East London, Docklands Campus                     

Transport: Cyprus DLR

Here is  a quick summary:
 
“From Personal Property to Speaking Subjects:  Youth, Gender, and the Right to Credit in an Attention  Economy.”

This talk engages with the politics of female sexual  self-display over the Internet, especially focusing on teens in America and  the U.K. I begin by discussing  a recent U.S. law suit filed by two  Indiana teens against their high school principal after he punished them for  posting risqué photos in a private section of their MySpace accounts. Echoing  current wisdom that there is never a guarantee of privacy on the Internet, the  American Civil Liberties Union (representing the girls)  has chosen to  frame their activities as free-speech acts, arguing that these teens were  expressing themselves to themselves in two sorts of bedrooms: their  real-life one, and their online one. In this talk, I  frame the case in  terms of my recent work  on a phenomenon I call “micro-celebrity”: a new  way to perform the self that combines the visual techniques of corporate  branding with the distribution technologies of the Internet.  I am  particularly interested in how sexism and ageism converge within  micro-celebrity’s overwhelming investment in the so-called ‘attention  economies of the Web.’ This speech returns to a question I raised in my book  Camgirls: “Why are women continually encouraged to express  themselves in media through confession, celebrity and sexual display, yet  punished with conservative censure and backlash when their representation  becomes ‘too much’ to handle?” 

Dr. Theresa Senft is interested in how the Internet has been changing our notions of the public, the private and the pornographic in contemporary society. For her most recent book, Camgirls: Celebrity & Community in the Age of Social Networks, Terri ran a webcam out of her own home for a year and charted her experiences. Other books by Terri include History of the Internet, 1843-Present (co-author) and a special issue of Women & Performance devoted to sexuality & cyberspace (co-editor.) Terri's work has been published in The New York Times, she has appeared on National Public Radio (U.S.), and in the documentary Webcam Girls.

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Note: this lecture will be an updated and revised-for-the-UK version of something I did earlier at Harvard last year.  It will also tangentially addresses teen “sexting,” a practice that is providing the foundation for a moral panic in the U.S. right now. 

The URL for that talk (if you want to read, or assign to students, or whatever), is: http://tsenft.livejournal.com/405387.html#cutid1


Feel free to contact me with any questions about the lecture, thoughts on the topic, or (especially) links to other work being done in this area, by you or anyone else you know. I'm at t.senft@uel.ac.uk

Many thanks!



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