Results for 'vlogs'

7 found
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  1.  22
    Expat Vlogs: Bilingual Couples Share their Lives on the Internet.Katarzyna Buczek & Agnieszka Stępkowska - 2023 - Studies in Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric 68 (1):169-182.
    As there are more and more bilingual couples who ran vlogs to share their bilingual and intercultural lives on the internet, this paper seeks to delineate the sources of motivation for these couples to disclose their privacy through vlogging. Based on the sample of selected vlogs, a qualitative analysis has been conducted to obtain the sociolinguistic picture of the bilingual couples’ motivations to attract wider audiences via the internet. The analysis of vlogs, informed by a multimodal theoretical (...)
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  2.  19
    Testing a Social Network Intervention Using Vlogs to Promote Physical Activity Among Adolescents: A Randomized Controlled Trial.Thabo J. Van Woudenberg, Kirsten E. Bevelander, William J. Burk, Crystal R. Smit, Laura Buijs & Moniek Buijzen - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  3.  27
    Dis/Assembling Schizophrenia on YouTube: Theorizing an Analog Body in a Virtual Sphere.Erica Hua Fletcher - 2016 - Journal of Medical Humanities 37 (3):257-274.
    As visual technologies become increasingly networked online, websites like YouTube provide a space to share vlogs online, suggest related content for viewers, and help in/form virtual communities, including those of mental illness. Within this space, vlogs of schizophrenia and comments generated about them by other users can represent transitional, dialogical states of illness that speak back to the analog body and affect a body’s way of being in the world. Moreover, as vlogs create resistance against static definitions (...)
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  4.  11
    Ontologies and Natures: Knowledge About Health in Visual Culture.Milton Fernando Gonzalez Rodriguez - 2022 - Lexington Books.
    The book explores how images register the relation between societies and theirs and others' health epistemic ecosystems. The author focuses on presumably trivial objects, such as vlogs, a toy, or a facial cream, to show how nature is presumed and represented as part of the care and cure of the body.
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  5.  17
    Doing Bodies in YouTube Videos about Contested Illnesses.Jenny Slatman, Sanneke de Haan & Irene Groenevelt - 2022 - Body and Society 28 (4):28-52.
    This article is based on an online ethnographic study of Dutch women who use YouTube as a medium to document their contested illness experiences. During 13 months of observations between 2017 and 2019, we followed a sample of 16 YouTubers, and conducted an in-depth analysis of 30 YouTube videos and of 7 interviews. By adopting a ‘praxiographic’ approach to social media, and by utilising insights from phenomenological theory, this study teases out how bodies are ‘done’ in (the making of) these (...)
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  6.  14
    The social superpower: the big truth about little lies.Kathleen Wyatt - 2022 - London: Biteback Publishing.
    In an era of fake news, alternative truths and leaked secrets making constant headlines, we are telling stories about ourselves all the time, and we are telling them in so many different ways. From vlogs and blogs to tweets and posts, from photos and gifs to live streams. From instant updates that disappear to rash words that last for ever and data trails that chart every step we take. While people around her shake their heads and mutter bad things (...)
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  7. Transforming Lasswell´s linear model in the digital football discourse: The level of Youtube communication.Oksana Kyrylova, Oleksandr P. Krupskyi & Alla Bakhmetieva - 2022 - Revista San Gregorio 1 (52):1-19.
    The purpose of the article was to explain how the communicative specificity of the digital social media environment is changing the traditional Lasswell’s linear model. The changes that occur in the structural units of the model were explored. This complex was examined based on the material of 18 successful YouTube blogs dedicated to football. It was found that the modern ecosystem of sports journalism is undergoing significant transformations in terms of content and structure. And the fact that modern digital journalism (...)
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