LGBT identity and online new media

Preface Introduction, Christopher Pullen Part I: Active Youth 1.The Murder of Lawrence King and LGBT Online Stimulations of Narrative Copresence, Christopher Pullen 2."A YouTube of One's Own?": "Coming Out" Videos as Rhetorical Action Jonathan Alexander & Elizabeth Losh 3.YouTube Courtship: The Private Ins and Public Outs of Chris and Nickas, Damon Lindler Lazzara 4.Virtually Supportive: Self-Disclosure Of Minority Sexualities Through Online Social Networking Sites, Bruce E. Drushel Part II: Commodity Networks 5.Lesbians Who Are Married to Men: Identity, Collective Stories and the Internet Online Community, Margaret Cooper 6. A Very Personal World: Advertisement and Identity of Trans-persons on Craigslist, Daniel Farr 7.The Facebook Revolution: LGBT Identity and Activism, Margaret Cooper & Kristina Dzara 8. PlanetOut and the Dichotomies of Queer Media Conglomeration, Ben Aslinger 9.Commercial Closet Association: LGBT identities in mainstream advertising, Ian Davies Part III: Fan Cultures 10: Queering Brad Pitt: The Struggle Between Gay Fans and the Hollywood Machine to Control Star Discourse and Image on the Web, Ronald Gregg 11: Internet Fandom, Queer Discourse and Identities, Rosalind Hanmer 12: Transconversations: New Media, Community and Identity, Monica Edwards 13: Out and About: Slash Fic, Re-imagined Texts and Queer Commentaries, Richard Berger 14: Identity Unmoored: Yaoi in the West, Mark McHarry Part IV: Body Discourses 15:Look at me! Images, Validation and Cultural Currency on Gaydar, Sharif Mowlabocus 16: Gay Men's Use of Online Pictures in Fat-Affirming Groups, Jason Whitesel 17: "Compartmentalize Your Life" Advising Army Men on RealJock.com, Noah Tsika 18: "Stephanie is Wired: who shall turn him on?", Trudy Barber 19: Health Information, STDs, and the Internet: Implications for Gay Men, Joseph Clift Part V: COMMUNITY SPACES 20:The Demise of the Gay Enclave, Communication Infrastructure Theory, and the Reconstitution of Gay Public Space, Nikki Usher & Eleanor Morrison 21: From Websites to Wal-Mart: Youth, Identity Work, and the Queering of Boundary Publics in Small Town, USA, Mary L. Gray