Adolescence, Girlhood, and Media Migration

US Teens' Use of Social Media to Negotiate Offline Struggles

By (author) Aimee Rickman

Publication date:

20 February 2018

Length of book:

186 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

Dimensions:

238x159mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9781498553926

Adolescence, Girlhood, and Media Migration: US Teens' Use of Social Media to Negotiate Offline Struggles considers teens’ social media use as a lens through which to more clearly see American adolescence, girlhood, and marginality in the twenty-first century. Detailing a year-long ethnography following a racially, ethnically, and economically diverse group of female, rural, teenaged adolescents living in the Midwest region of the United States, this book investigates how young women creatively call upon social media in everyday attempts to address, mediate, and negotiate the struggles they face in their offline lives as minors, females, and ethnic and racial minorities. In tracing girls’ appreciation and use of social media to roots anchored well outside of the individual, this book finds American girls’ relationships with social media to be far more culturally nuanced than adults typically imagine. There are material reasons for US teens’ social media use explained by how we do girlhood, adolescence, family, class, race, and technology. And, as this book argues, an unpacking of these areas is essential to understanding adolescent girls’ social media use.

Perhaps the most valuable lesson to be learned from Rickman’s book and research is that “media migration” is a new avenue for young female adolescents. It is an avenue for those seeking to escape harsh, and what they view as unfair, societal limitations. In presenting this avenue, the book paints a different picture than the more typical developmental research focusing on girls’ media use, which focuses more on what is happening and the challenges of changing it (Festl and Quandt 2016; Frison et al. 2016; Symons et al. 2017) rather than focusing on why media is engaged (see Wängqvist and Frisén 2016). Rickman even goes one step further as she argues that the phenomenon she identified is both unnatural and avoidable—society need only (as a first step) look to the three points highlighted in her impressive book.