![]() ![]() “ ‘He Has a Way Gayer Facebook Than I Do’: Investigating Sexual Identity Disclosure and Context Collapse on a Social Networking Site.” New Media & Society 18(6): 891– 907.Įngland, Paula, Mishel, Emma, Caudillo, Monica L. “ Gender Goals: Defining Masculinity and Navigating Peer Pressure to Engage in Sexual Activity.” Gender & Society 33(5): 795– 817.ĭuguay, Stefanie. “ Sexual Identity Disclosure among Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Individuals.” Sociological Science 7:504–27.ĭuckworth, Kiera D., Trautner, Mary Nell. New York: NYU Press.ĭoan, Long, Mize, Trenton D. Straights: Heterosexuality in Post-closeted Culture. “ Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex: A Black Feminist Critique of Antidiscrimination Doctrine, Feminist Theory and Antiracist Politics.” University of Chicago Legal Forum 1989(1):139–67.ĭean, James Joseph. “ Intersectionality’s Definitional Dilemmas.” Annual Review of Sociology 41(1): 1– 20.Ĭrenshaw, Kimberlé. “ Promises and Pitfalls of Using Digital Traces for Demographic Research.” Demography 55(5):1979–99.Ĭollins, Patricia Hill. Retrieved June 26, 2021.Ĭesare, Nina, Lee, Hedwig, McCormick, Tyler, Spiro, Emma, Zagheni, Emilio. “ What Can Asexuality Offer Sociology? Insights from the 2017 Asexual Community Census.” SocArXiv. “ ‘Straight with a Pinch of Bi’: The Construction of Heterosexuality as an Elastic Category among Adult US Men.” Sexualities 21(1–2): 90– 108.Ĭarroll, Megan. “ ‘Straight Girls Kissing?’ Understanding Same-Gender Sexuality Beyond the Elite College Campus.” Gender & Society 30(5):745–68.Ĭarrillo, Héctor, Hoffman, Amanda. “ Social Marking and the Mental Coloring of Identity: Sexual Identity Construction and Maintenance in the United States.” Sociological Forum 11(3): 497– 522.īudnick, Jamie. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.īrekhus, Wayne. It’s Complicated: The Social Lives of Networked Teens. “ Baking Gender into Social Media Design: How Platforms Shape Categories for Users and Advertisers.” Social Media + Society 2(4): 1– 12.īoyd, danah. “ The Gender Binary Will Not Be Deprogrammed: Ten Years of Coding Gender on Facebook.” New Media & Society 19(6):880–98.īivens, Rena, Haimson, Oliver L. “ Social Media Use in 2021.” Retrieved June 3, 2021.īivens, Rena. New York: Association for Computing Machinery.Īuxier, Brooke, Anderson, Monica. “ What Happens after Disclosing Stigmatized Experiences on Identified Social Media: Individual, Dyadic, and Social/Network Outcomes.” Pp 1– 15 in Proceedings of the 2019 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, CHI ’19. “ ‘A Male Dominance Kind of Vibe’: Approaching Unsolicited Dick Pics as Sexism.” New Media & Society 23(6):1465–80.Īndalibi, Nazanin. “ Combining Social Media and Survey Data to Nowcast Migrant Stocks in the United States.” Population Research and Policy Review. “ The Impact of Hurricane Maria on Out-Migration from Puerto Rico: Evidence from Facebook Data.” Population and Development Review 45(3):617–30.Īlexander, Monica, Polimis, Kivan, Zagheni, Emilio. Somerset, UK: Wiley.Īlexander, Monica, Polimis, Kivan, Zagheni, Emilio. ![]() This study contributes to the sociology of sexuality with a quantitative analysis, using novel digital data, of how sexuality is signaled socially.Īgresti, Alan. The authors interpret these variations in sexuality disclosure on social media to reflect the salience of sexual identity, intersected at times with availability. ![]() Consistent with gendered expectations, women more often express a bisexual interest in men and women men are more explicit about their heterosexuality. There is a large generational difference younger social media users share their sexualities at high rates, while for older cohorts marital status substitutes for sexual identity. Stratifying by age, gender, and relationship status, the authors show how these attributes structure the propensity to disclose different sexual identities. Through the Facebook advertising platform, the authors collect aggregate counts encompassing 200 million Facebook users, 28 percent of whom disclose sexuality-related information. The authors analyze the expression of sexualities in the contemporary United States using data about disclosure on social media.
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