Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Ge H" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 The Bug-Network (BugNet): A Global Experimental Network Testing the Effects of Invertebrate Herbivores and Fungal Pathogens on Plant Communities and Ecosystem Function in Open Ecosystems Kempel A; Adamidis GC; Anadón JD; Atkinson J; Auge H; Avtzis D; Bachelot B; Bashirzadeh M; Bota JL; Classen A; Constantinou I; Crawley M; de Bellis T; Dostal P; Ebeling A; Eisenhauer N; Eldridge DJ; Encina G; Estrada C; Everingham S; Fanin N; Feng Y; Gaspar M; Gooriah L; Graff P; Montalván EG; Montalván PG; Hartke TR; Huang L; Jochum M; Kaljund K; Karmiris I; Koorem K; Korell L; Laine AL; le Provost G; Lessard JP; Liu M; Liu X; Liu Y; Llancabure J; Loïez S; Loydi A; Marrero H; Gockel S; Montoya A; Münzbergo 41080499
ENCS
2 A review on indoor airborne transmission of COVID-19- modelling and mitigation approaches Rayegan S; Shu C; Berquist J; Jeon J; Zhou LG; Wang LL; Mbareche H; Tardif P; Ge H; 40478135
ENCS
3 Author Correction: Typical and extreme weather datasets for studying the resilience of buildings to climate change and heatwaves Machard A; Salvati A; P Tootkaboni M; Gaur A; Zou J; Wang LL; Baba F; Ge H; Bre F; Bozonnet E; Corrado V; Luo X; Levinson R; Lee SH; Hong T; Salles Olinger M; Machado RMES; da Guarda ELA; Veiga RK; Lamberts R; Afshari A; Ramon D; Ngoc Dung Ngo H; Sengupta A; Breesch H; Heijmans N; Deltour J; Kuborn X; Sayadi S; Qian B; Zhang C; Rahif R; Attia S; Stern P; Holzer P; 39814748
PHYSICS
4 "How do we do that?" An analysis of TikToks by lesbians over age 30 representing sexual identity, lived experience over time, and solidarity Jamet-Lange H; Duguay S; 38907626
CONCORDIA
5 Typical and extreme weather datasets for studying the resilience of buildings to climate change and heatwaves Machard A; Salvati A; P Tootkaboni M; Gaur A; Zou J; Wang LL; Baba F; Ge H; Bre F; Bozonnet E; Corrado V; Luo X; Levinson R; Lee SH; Hong T; Salles Olinger M; Machado RMES; da Guarda ELA; Veiga RK; Lamberts R; Afshari A; Ramon D; Ngoc Dung Ngo H; Sengupta A; Breesch H; Heijmans N; Deltour J; Kuborn X; Sayadi S; Qian B; Zhang C; Rahif R; Attia S; Stern P; Holzer P; 38782916
PHYSICS
6 Family Members' Perceptions of Their Psychological Responses One Year Following Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) Hospitalization: Qualitative Findings From the Caring Intensively Study Rennick JE; Knox AM; Treherne SC; Dryden-Palmer K; Stremler R; Chambers CT; McRae L; Ho M; Stack DM; Dougherty G; Fudge H; Campbell-Yeo M; 34557460
CONCORDIA

 

Title:"How do we do that?" An analysis of TikToks by lesbians over age 30 representing sexual identity, lived experience over time, and solidarity
Authors:Jamet-Lange HDuguay S
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38907626/
DOI:10.1080/10894160.2024.2369431
Publication:Journal of lesbian studies
Keywords:Social mediadigital mediaintergenerational communicationqueer timeself-representation
PMID:38907626 Category: Date Added:2024-06-22
Dept Affiliation: CONCORDIA
1 Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Description:

Lesbians have long turned to digital media and technologies for information, support, and to self-represent sexual identity in ways that have the capacity for building communities and gathering publics and counterpublics. TikTok is a short video platform popular with young people, which has increasingly seen the participation of comparatively older users. This paper investigates the self-representation of lesbians over age 30 on TikTok to understand the themes in their content and how the platform shapes their communication with others. Through sampling tailored to TikTok's algorithmic curation, ten lesbians' accounts are examined alongside qualitative coding and analysis of 50 of these creators' videos. Findings reveal key themes regarding the expression of identity and age, lived experience over time, and bids for connection and community. TikTokers expressed lesbian identity in continuity with longstanding stereotypes to enhance visibility but also incorporated humor and youthful trends to give rise to novel identity expressions. Videos showcasing the passage of time and sociopolitical change demonstrated the resilience of lesbian lives and conveyed hope while advice and statements of solidarity expressed support for young people's present struggles with homophobia and transphobia. Contrasting with studies of TikTok's generational wars, this article shows how older lesbians are building generational bridges through their uptake of youth-driven platform practices, sharing of past challenges to support youth in overcoming present hurdles, and by modeling lesbian futures.





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