2016
DOI: 10.1177/1363460716645791
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

‘Not in front of the parents!’ Young people, sexual literacies and intimate citizenship in the internet age

Abstract: Clause 13 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child states that children have the right 'to seek, receive or impart information and ideas of all kinds, regardless of frontiers, either orally, in writing or in print, in art or in any other media of the child's voice'. However, there is one area in which this directive is constrained in various countries by domestic regulations curtailing children's access to information. That area is human sexuality. The arguments for and against children's ac… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
14
0
1

Year Published

2017
2017
2020
2020

Publication Types

Select...
4
1

Relationship

1
4

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 8 publications
(15 citation statements)
references
References 29 publications
0
14
0
1
Order By: Relevance
“…These manipulated images can be put to various uses including the trolling and harassment of other internet users by tricking them into viewing pictures with offensive violent, racist or sexist content (Jones 2010: 128-29). However, consonant with my previous work on fandoms (McLelland 2012;2017a;2017b) in this paper I am concerned with their circulation among fans, particularly largely female "slash" fandoms that involve content taken from both Japanese and western pop cultures. Many manips are playful and imaginative re-creations that superimpose images of the manipulator her-or him-self into a scene from a TV series, anime or movie, or with celebrities.…”
Section: Parody Sexuality and Child Abusementioning
confidence: 78%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…These manipulated images can be put to various uses including the trolling and harassment of other internet users by tricking them into viewing pictures with offensive violent, racist or sexist content (Jones 2010: 128-29). However, consonant with my previous work on fandoms (McLelland 2012;2017a;2017b) in this paper I am concerned with their circulation among fans, particularly largely female "slash" fandoms that involve content taken from both Japanese and western pop cultures. Many manips are playful and imaginative re-creations that superimpose images of the manipulator her-or him-self into a scene from a TV series, anime or movie, or with celebrities.…”
Section: Parody Sexuality and Child Abusementioning
confidence: 78%
“…However, albeit stories of children as victims are more readily apparent in the media, there is an absence of what Karaian (2012: 59) refers to as ‘counter-narratives’, where young people are shown to demonstrate sexual agency and knowingness. These ‘alternative ways of knowing and being’ voiced by young people themselves are liable to be censored or subject to ‘implicit foreclosure’ by dominant discourses that acknowledge children as victims of sexual activity but not as sexual agents in their own right (Karaian, 2012: 64; McLelland, 2017a; see also Angelides, 2004; Harris, 2005).…”
Section: Changing Constructions Of Childhoodmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, the last few years has seen the publication of several important texts dealing with the relationship between new media and affect (e.g., Chambers, 2013;Garde-Hansen & Gorton, 2013 ;Hillis, Paasonen, & Petit, 2015;Hjorth & Lim, 2012;Karatzogianni & Kuntsman, 2012;McGlotten, 2013;McLelland, 2016;Paasonen, 2011;Payne, 2014;van Dijck, 2013). These volumes showcase a number of innovative theoretical attempts to think together new media and affect/emotion/intimacies, often drawing on empirical case studies.…”
Section: Existing Scholarshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is instructive but depressing to see how these reports have seized so much public attention and how they have crowded out any of the research being undertaken in other spaces with various age groups, and which reach more complex conclusions about the significances of sexually explicit material in everyday life (cf. Albury, 2014; Angelides, 2013; Attwood et al, 2018; Curtis and Hunt, 2007; Gregory, 2018; Hillier and Harrison, 2007; McLelland, 2016; Mowlabocus et al., 2013; Mulholland, 2015; Paasonen et al., 2015; Smith et al., 2015).…”
Section: Reviewing the Evidencementioning
confidence: 99%