“It’s a terrible way to go to work:” what 70 million readers’ comments on the Guardian revealed about hostility to women and minorities online
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] Scott Wright,et al. A Tale of Two Stories from “Below the Line” , 2015 .
[2] Emma Pierson,et al. Outnumbered but Well-Spoken: Female Commenters in the New York Times , 2015, CSCW.
[3] Dominique Brossard,et al. The "Nasty Effect: " Online Incivility and Risk Perceptions of Emerging Technologies , 2014, J. Comput. Mediat. Commun..
[4] Neil Thurman,et al. A CLASH OF CULTURES , 2008 .
[5] Zizi Papacharissi,et al. Democracy online: civility, politeness, and the democratic potential of online political discussion groups , 2004, New Media Soc..
[6] Tim P. Vos,et al. Reader comments as press criticism: Implications for the journalistic field , 2016 .
[7] Melissa Aronczyk,et al. Reading the comments: Likers, haters, and manipulators at the bottom of the web , 2016, New Media Soc..
[8] Jure Leskovec,et al. Antisocial Behavior in Online Discussion Communities , 2015, ICWSM.
[9] Henrik Örnebring,et al. USER-GENERATED CONTENT AND THE NEWS , 2011 .
[10] C. Ruiz,et al. Public Sphere 2.0? The Democratic Qualities of Citizen Debates in Online Newspapers , 2011 .
[11] Fernando Bermejo,et al. Misunderstanding the Internet , 2013, British Politics.
[12] ‘Their two cents worth’: Exploring user agency in readers’ comments in online news media , 2012 .
[13] Elizabeth F. Churchill,et al. Profanity use in online communities , 2012, CHI.
[14] A. C. Emovon. WOMEN OF POWER , 1997 .
[15] Kylie Jarrett. Interactivity is Evil! A critical investigation of Web 2.0 , 2008, First Monday.
[16] Nancy Fraser. Rethinking the Public Sphere: A Contribution to the Critique of Actually Existing Democracy , 2016, Public Space Reader.
[17] Tamara Shepherd,et al. Histories of Hating , 2015 .
[18] Stephen A. Rains,et al. Online and Uncivil? Patterns and Determinants of Incivility in Newspaper Website Comments , 2014 .
[19] Britney Summit-Gil,et al. This is why we can’t have nice things: Mapping the relationship between online trolling and mainstream culture , 2016, New Media Soc..
[20] Nancy Fraser,et al. Rethinking the public sphere: A contribution to the critique of democracy as it really is , 2001 .
[21] B. D. Waal. The people formerly known as the audience , 2008 .
[22] N. Gavey,et al. Doing and denying sexism: online responses to a New Zealand feminist campaign against sexist advertising , 2018 .
[23] Axel Bruns,et al. Produsage , 2007, C&C '07.
[24] Clay Shirky,et al. Here comes everybody , 2009 .
[25] A. Bergström,et al. Beneficial yet crappy: Journalists and audiences on obstacles and opportunities in reader comments , 2015 .
[26] J. Dilevko. Hate Crimes in Cyberspace , 2017 .
[27] Patricia L. Dooley. The technology of journalism , 2007 .
[28] Ashley Muddiman,et al. News Values, Cognitive Biases, and Partisan Incivility in Comment Sections , 2017 .
[29] C. Ellis,et al. Autoethnography: Understanding Qualitative Research , 2015 .
[30] Kamil Wais,et al. Gender Prediction Methods Based on First Names with genderizeR , 2016, R J..
[31] B. Gardiner,et al. The dark side of Guardian comments , 2016 .
[32] Alison Ritter,et al. Speaking truth to power. , 2008, Drug and alcohol review.
[33] E. Jane. “Your a Ugly, Whorish, Slut” , 2014 .
[34] Dan Gillmor,et al. We the media - grassroots journalism by the people, for the people , 2006 .
[35] J. Singer,et al. “Comment Is Free, but Facts Are Sacred”: User-generated Content and Ethical Constructs at the Guardian , 2009 .