ABSTRACT

Social media has helped boost the culture of intoxication, a central aspect of young people’s social lives in many Western countries. Initial research suggests that these technologies enable highly-nuanced, targeted marketing and innovations – creating new virtual spaces that alter the dynamics and consequences of drinking cultures in significant ways.

Youth Drinking Cultures in a Digital World focuses on how pervasive social networking technologies contribute to drinking cultures. It brings together international contributions from leading researchers in this emerging field to explore how new technologies are reconfiguring the key themes, traditional interests, practices and concerns of alcohol-related research with young people. It is particularly concerned with three important areas, namely:

  • identities, social relations and power
  • alcohol marketing and commercialisation
  • public health and regulating alcohol promotion.

This innovative book includes original research and commentary and is a must-read for academics and researchers in the areas of public health, psychology, sociology, media studies, youth studies and alcohol studies.

part I|87 pages

Identities, social relations and power

chapter 1|16 pages

Neoliberalism, alcohol and identity

A symptomatic reading of young people’s drinking cultures in a digital world

chapter 2|18 pages

Social locations

Class, gender and young people’s alcohol consumption in a digital world

chapter 3|17 pages

Curating identity

Drinking, young women, femininities and social media practices

part III|77 pages

Public health and regulating alcohol promotion

chapter 10|18 pages

Social media affordances for curbing alcohol consumption

Insights from Hello Sunday Morning blog posts

chapter 11|17 pages

Regulating social media

Reasons not to ask the audience

chapter 13|12 pages

New marketing, new policy?

Emerging debates over regulating alcohol campaigns in social media

chapter 14|12 pages

Digital alcohol marketing and the public good

Industry, research and ethics