Social Networking
The prototypical computer whiz of popular imagination — pasty, geeky, male — has failed to live up to his reputation.
Research shows that among the youngest Internet users, the primary creators of Web content (blogs, graphics, photographs, Web sites) are not misfits resembling the Lone Gunmen of “The X Files.” On the contrary, the cyberpioneers of the moment are digitally effusive teenage girls. . . .
From a young age they learn that they are objects, Professor Gill said, so they learn how to describe themselves. Historically, girls and women have been expected to be social, communal and skilled in decorative arts.
“This would be called the feminization of the Internet,” she said.
Boys, she added, are generally taught “to engage in ways that aren’t confessional, that aren’t emotional.”
Research by the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School, the result of focus groups and interviews with young people 13 to 22, suggests that girls’ online practices tend to be about their desire to express themselves, particularly their originality. . . .
Sorry, Boys, This Is Our Domain
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