Full metadata
Title
Getting to be seen: visibility as erasure in media economies of transgender youth
Description
There is currently a proliferation of images of transgender youth in popular discourse, many of which reflect the threat to capitalist heteronormativity that transgender young people pose to contemporary U.S. society. This veritable explosion in media visibility of transgender youth must be critically examined. This dissertation explores media economies of transgender youth visibility by examining media and self-represented narratives by and about transgender young people in contemporary U.S. popular discourse to uncover where, and how, certain young transgender bodies become endowed with value in the service of the neoliberal multicultural U.S. nation-state. As normative transgender youth become increasingly visible as signifiers of the progress of the tolerant U.S. nation, transgender youth who are positioned further from the intelligible field of U.S. citizenship are erased.
Utilizing frameworks from critical transgender studies, youth studies, and media studies, this project illustrates how value is distributed, and at the expense of whom this process of assigning value occurs, in media economies of transgender youth visibility. Discursive analyses of online self-representations, as well as of online representations of media narratives, facilitate this investigation into how transgender youth negotiate the terms of those narratives circulating about them in U.S. contemporary media. This project demonstrates that increases in visibility do not always translate into political power; at best, they distract from the need for political interventions for marginalized groups, and at worst, they erase those stories already far from view in popular discourse: of non-normative transgender youth who are already positioned outside the realm of intelligibility to a national body structured by a heteronormative binary gender system.
Utilizing frameworks from critical transgender studies, youth studies, and media studies, this project illustrates how value is distributed, and at the expense of whom this process of assigning value occurs, in media economies of transgender youth visibility. Discursive analyses of online self-representations, as well as of online representations of media narratives, facilitate this investigation into how transgender youth negotiate the terms of those narratives circulating about them in U.S. contemporary media. This project demonstrates that increases in visibility do not always translate into political power; at best, they distract from the need for political interventions for marginalized groups, and at worst, they erase those stories already far from view in popular discourse: of non-normative transgender youth who are already positioned outside the realm of intelligibility to a national body structured by a heteronormative binary gender system.
Date Created
2016
Contributors
- Reinke, Rachel Anne (Author)
- Switzer, Heather D. (Thesis advisor)
- Aizura, Aren (Committee member)
- Anderson, Lisa (Committee member)
- Himberg, Julia (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
- Gender Studies
- LGBTQ studies
- Women's Studies
- Affect
- Citizenship
- digital media
- Transgender
- Visibility
- Youth
- Gender identity in mass media
- Transgender youth--United States--Social conditions.
- Transgender youth
- Minorities--United States--Social conditions.
- Digital media--Social aspects--United States.
- digital media
- Transphobia--United States.
- Transphobia
Resource Type
Extent
x, 137 pages : color illustrations
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.38749
Statement of Responsibility
by Rachel Anne Reinke
Description Source
Viewed on October 13, 2016
Level of coding
full
Note
thesis
Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2016
bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 127-137)
Field of study: Gender studies
System Created
- 2016-06-01 08:59:20
System Modified
- 2021-08-30 01:22:43
- 3 years 2 months ago
Additional Formats