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El. knyga: Mediated Millennials

Edited by (Santa Clara University, USA), Edited by (The George Washington University, USA), Edited by (Illinois State University, USA), Edited by (Harvard University, USA), Edited by (The Australian National Universit), Edited by (Sćo Paulo State University-Marilia, Brazil), Edited by , Edited by (UC Berkeley, USA)

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Sponsored by the Communication, Information Technologies, and Media Sociology section of the American Sociological Association (CITAMS), Volume 19 of Emerald Studies in Media and Communications draws on global case studies that examine media use by millennials. By bringing together contributors and case studies from four continents to examine millennial digital media practices, the volume charts out multiple dimensions of Gen Ys digital media engagements: smartphone use among Israelis, the activities of Brazilian youths in LAN houses, selfies in the New Zealand context, and American millennials engaged in a variety of digital pursuits ranging from seeking employment, to content creation, to gaming, to consuming news and political content. Through these case studies we see parallels in the mediated millennial experience across key digital venues including Twitter and YouTube, and MMOs. None-the-less, contributors also prompt us to keep in mind the importance of those millennials without equal access to resources who must rely on public venues such as libraries and LAN Houses. Across these venues and arenas of practice, the research provides an important collection of research shedding important light on the first generation growing up with the normative expectation to perform digital identity work, create visual culture, and engage in the digital public sphere.
Introduction to 'Millennials and Media'; Aneka Khilnani, Jeremy Schulz,
Laura Robinson, John Baldwin, Heloisa Pait, Apryl Williams, Jenny Davis and
Gabe Ignatow Chapter
1. Millennials Usher a Post-Digital Era: Theorizing How
Generation Y Engages with Digital Media; Deb Aikat
 
THE MILLENNIAL SOCIAL SELF 
Chapter
2. A Story of Love and Hate: Smartphones in Students Lives; Vered
Elishar-Malka, Yaron Ariel, and Ruth Avidar 
Chapter
3. Online-Offline Social Ties in Massive Multiplayer Online Games;
Juan G. Arroyo-Flores 
Chapter
4. Do No Harm Lest Others Do Harm to You: Self Protection and Risk
Management by Generation Y on Social Media; Katarzyna Wodniak and Anne
Holohan 

VISUAL CULTURE AND CREATION OF THE SELF 
Chapter
5. I want my YouTube!: Trends in Early Youth-Created Music Videos;
Steven Kendrat and Charisse LPree Corsbie-Massay 
Chapter
6. Digital Photography and the Morselization of Communicative Memory;
Barry King
 
MILLENNIALS, NEWS, AND THE DIGITAL PUBLIC SPHERE  
Chapter
7. The First Twitter Handle(s) of the United States: An information
processing perspective on Twitter use by the President of the United State
and its effect on Millennials; John Xeller and David Atkin 
Chapter
8. Embracing the visual, verbal and viral media: How post-millennial
consumption habits are reshaping the news; Chris Gentilviso and Deb Aikat
 
UN-MEDIATED MILLENNIALS & INEQUALITIES 
Chapter
9. Poverty and the Shadow of Utopian Internet Theory: Insights From
Interviews with Unemployed Internet Users Living Below the Poverty Line;
David J. Park 
Chapter
10. The Lan-House Phenomenon: Exploring the Uses and Symbolic
Functions of the Internet Among Low-Income Brazilian Youth; Juliana Maria (da
Silva) Trammel
Jeremy Schulz Researcher, Institute for the Study of Societal Issues, UC Berkeley, USA Laura Robinson Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, Santa Clara University, USA   Aneka Khilnani, Candidate M.D., The George Washington University, USA 

John Baldwin Professor, School of Communication, Illinois State University, USA 

Heloisa Pait Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Sćo Paulo State University-Marilia, Brazil  Apryl A. Williams Fellow, Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society, Harvard University USA 

Jenny Davis Lecturer, School of Sociology, The Australian National University, Australia   Gabe Ignatow Professor and Graduate Director, Department of Sociology, University of North Texas, USA