ABSTRACT

Trans people are increasingly stepping out of the shadow of pathologization and secretiveness to tell their life stories, share information and to connect with like-minded others, using YouTube as a platform. Out Online: Trans Self-Representation and Community Building on YouTube explores the digital revolution of trans video blogging, addressing ’trans’ in its many meanings and configurations to examine the different ways in which the body in transformation and the vlog as a medium intersect. Drawing on rich, virtual ethnographic studies of trans video blogging, the author sheds light on the ways in which the video blog (or ’vlog’) as a multimodal medium enables trans people to tell their stories with the use of sound, text, music, and pictures - thus offering new ways to construct and archive bodily changes, and to revise the story endlessly. A groundbreaking study of the intersection between trans identity and technology, Out Online explores the transformative and therapeutic potential of the video blog as a means by which trans vloggers can emerge and develop online, using the vlog as a site for creation, intervention, community building and resistance. As such, it will appeal to social scientists and scholars of cultural and media studies with interests in gender, sexuality and embodiment.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|18 pages

Trans Meets Screen Media

chapter 3|31 pages

“Sisters Are Doin' It for Themselves”

Reappropriating Trans Woman as a Category and Spectacle through Digital Storytelling

chapter 4|38 pages

Screen Births

Trans Vlogs as a Transformative Media for Self-Representation

chapter 5|33 pages

DIY Therapy

Exploring the Trans Video Blogs as Affective Self-Representations

chapter 6|32 pages

YouTube Is My Hood

Creating a Sense of Community

chapter |5 pages

Epilogue

Digital Trans Activism