ABSTRACT

Producing Queer Youth challenges popular ideas about online media culture as a platform for empowerment, cultural transformation, and social progress. Based on over three years of participant action research with queer teen media-makers and textual analysis of hundreds of youth-produced videos and popular media campaigns, the book unsettles assumptions that having a "voice" and gaining visibility and recognition necessarily equate to securing rights and resources. Instead, Berliner offers a nuanced picture of openings that emerge for youth media producers as they negotiate the structures of funding and publicity and manage their identities with digital self-representations. Examining youth media practices within broader communication history and critical media pedagogy, she forwards an approach to media production that re-centers the process of making as the site of potential learning and social connection. Ultimately, she reframes digital media participation as a struggle for—rather than, in itself, evidence of—power.

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|32 pages

The Problem with Youth Voices

chapter 2|31 pages

“Look at Me, I’m Doing Fine!”

The Conundrum of Legibility, Visibility, and Identity Management in Queer Viral Videos *

chapter 3|33 pages

Vernacular Voices

Business Gets Personal in Public Service Announcements

chapter 4|20 pages

“I Can’t Talk When I’m Supposed to Say Something”

Negotiating Expression in a Queer-Youth-Produced Anti-Bullying Video

chapter |17 pages

Conclusion

Out of the Closet and into the Tweets