Cover not available

Article published In: Sexuality and the discursive construction of the digital self in the Global South
Edited by Nell Haynes and Baird Campbell
[Journal of Language and Sexuality 9:1] 2020
► pp. 6992

Get fulltext from our e-platform
References (48)
References
Babidge, Sally. 2013. “Socios”: The contested morality of ‘partnerships’ in Indigenous community-mining company relations, Northern Chile. The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology 18(2): 274–293. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Bacigalupo, Ana Mariella. 2007. Shamans of the Foye Tree: Gender, Power, and Healing among Chilean Mapuche. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Barchiesi, Franco. 2011. Precarious Liberation: Workers, the State, and Contested Social Citizenship. Albany, NY: SUNY Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Barthes, Roland. 1977. Image-Music-Text. New York: Hill and Wang.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Brubaker, Rogers & Cooper, Frederick. 2000. Beyond ‘identity’. Theory and Society: Renewal and Critique in Social Theory 29(1): 1–47. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Dunn, Elizabeth C. 2015. Privatizing Poland, Baby Food, Big Business, and the Remaking of Labor. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
The Economist. 2013. Mining in Chile: Copper solution. <[URL]> (November 1, 2014)
Eigenberg, Helen M. 1992. Homosexuality in male prisons: Demonstrating the need for a social constructionist approach. Criminal Justice Review 17(2): 219–234. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Elder, Glen. 1995. Of moffies, kaffirs and perverts: Male homosexuality and the discourse of moral order in the Apartheid state. In Mapping Desire: Geographies of Sexualities, David Bell (ed), 50–58. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Faulkner, Simon, Vis, Farida & D’Orazio, Francesco. 2018. Analyzing social media images. In Sage Handbook of Social Media, Jean Burgess, Alice Marwick & Thomas Poell (eds), 160–178. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Gerbaudo, Paolo. 2012. Tweets and the Streets: Social Media and Contemporary Activism. London: Pluto.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Gill, Lesley. 1997. Relocating class: Ex-miners and neoliberalism in Bolivia. Critique of Anthropology  171: 293–312. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Goffman, Erving. 1959. The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life. New York: Doubleday.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Gould, Jeffrey. 1998. To Die in This Way: Nicaraguan Indians and the Myth of Mestizaje, 1880–1965. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Green, James. 1998. Workers’ Struggles, Past and Present: A “Radical America” Reader. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Hale, Charles. 2002. Does multiculturalism menace: Governance, cultural rights, and the politics of identity in Guatemala. Journal of Latin American Studies 341: 485–524. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Hareven, Tamara. 1993. Family Time & Industrial Time: The Relationship Between the Family and Work in a New England Industrial Community. New York: University Press of America.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Haynes, Nell. 2016. Social Media in Northern Chile: Posting the Extraordinarily Ordinary. London: UCL Press. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. 2019. Writing on the walls: Discourses on Bolivian immigrants in Chilean meme humor. International Journal of Communication 131: 3122–3142.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Heinecken, Lindy. 1999. The silent right: Homosexuality and the military. African Security Review 8(5): 43–55. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Jenkins, Henry, Ford, Sam & Green, Joshua. 2013. Spreadable Media: Creating Value and Meaning in a Networked Culture. New York: New York University Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Jofré, Daniella. 2007. Reconstructing the politics of Indigenous identity in Chile. Archaeologies 3(1): 16–38. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Klein, Naomi. 2007. The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism. New York: Metropolitan Books/Henry Holt.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Larraín, Jorge. 2001. Identidad Chilena. Santiago de Chile: LOM.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
León, Leonardo. 2005. Araucanía: La violencia mestiza y el mito de la pacificación, 1880–1900. Santiago: Universidad Arcis.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Mapuexpress. 2016. A propósito del humor chileno y el lenguaje sexista – racista. <[URL]> (March 4, 2017)
Martin, Emily. 1997. Managing Americans: Policy and changes in the meanings of work and the self. In Anthropology of Policy: Critical Perspectives on Governance and Power, Cris Shore & Susan Wright (eds), 183–200. London: Routledge.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Miller, Daniel (ed). 2001. Car Culture. London: Berg.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Miller Klubock, Thomas. 1996. Working-class masculinity, middle-class morality, and labor politics in the Chilean copper mines. Journal of Social History 30(2): 435–463. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Milner, Ryan M. 2013. Pop polyvocality: Internet memes, public participation, and the Occupy Wall Street movement. International Journal of Communication 71: 2357–2390.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Miltner, Kate M. 2014. “There’s no place for lulz on LOLCats”: The role of genre, gender, and group identity in the interpretation and enjoyment of an internet meme. First Monday 19(8). <[URL]> (November 21, 2019)
2018. Internet memes. In Sage Handbook of Social Media, Jean Burgess, Alice Marwick & Thomas Poell (eds), 412–428. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Moisio, Risto, Arnould, Eric J. & Gentry, James W. 2013. Productive consumption in the class-mediated construction of domestic masculinity: Do-It-Yourself (DIY) home improvement in men’s identity work. Journal of Consumer Research 40(2): 298–316. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Nash, June C. 1979. We Eat the Mines and the Mines Eat Us: Dependency and Exploitation in Bolivian Tin Mines. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Olavarría, José & Moletto, Enrique. 2002. Hombres, identidad/es y sexualidad/es: III Encuentro de Estudios de Masculinidades. Santiago, Chile: FLASCO-Chile: Universidad Academia de Humanismo Cristiano: Red de Masculinidad/es.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Palmer, Gary B. & Jankowiak, William R. 1996. Performance and imagination: Toward an anthropology of the spectacular and the mundane. Cultural Anthropology: Journal of the Society for Cultural Anthropology 111: 225–258. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Richards, Patricia. 2013. Race and the Chilean Miracle / Neoliberalism, Democracy, and Indigenous Rights. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Riggen, Patricia. 2015. Los 33. <[URL]> (January 25, 2019)
Rothgerber, Hank. 2013. Real men don’t eat (vegetable) quiche: Masculinity and the justification of meat consumption. Psychology of Men and Masculinities 14(4): 363–375. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Salinas, Maximiliano. 1995. “Al verte sonriente decimos: ‘Viva María’”: Humor y misticismo en la religiosidad popular de Chile. UC Maule 191: 53–59.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Shifman, Limor. 2013. Memes in a digital world: Reconciling with a conceptual troublemaker. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication 18(3): 362–377. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Somerville, Madeleine. 2018. A vexing question: Why do men recycle less than women? The Guardian. <[URL]> (July 5, 2019)
Staab, Silke & Hill Maher, Kristen. 2006. The dual discourse about Peruvian domestic workers in Santiago de Chile: Class, race, and a nationalist project. Latin American Politics and Society 48(1): 87–116. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Stephen, Lynn. 1999. Construction of Indigenous suspects: Militarization and the gendered and ethnic dynamics of human rights abuses in southern Mexico. American Ethnologist 26(4): 822–842. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Taylor, Erin. 2014. The curation of the self in the age of the internet. (Paper presented at IUAES 2014 with JASCA Conference, Makuhari Messe, Chiba, Japan)
World Bank. 2017. “Bolivia | data.” World Development Indicators. World Bank Databank. <[URL]> (January 25, 2019)
Yanagisako, Sylvia Junko. 2010. Producing Culture and Capital: Family Firms in Italy. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Zaremberg, Gisela & Torres Wong, Marcela. 2018. Participation on the edge: Prior consultation and extractivism in Latin America. Journal of Politics in Latin America 10(3): 29–58. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Cited by (4)

Cited by four other publications

Bouchard, Michel & Daria Antsybor
2025. Memeing war: the use of humor for hope, resistance, and forging the nation. National Identities  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Hiramoto, Mie
2021. Reflections on theJournal of Language and Sexualityand the view from Japan. Journal of Language and Sexuality 10:1  pp. 37 ff. DOI logo
Leap, William L.
2021. Moving into the next ten years. Journal of Language and Sexuality 10:1  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Singh, Jaspal Naveel
2021. Language, gender and sexuality in 2020: forward Global South. Gender and Language 15:2  pp. 207 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 13 november 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.

Mobile Menu Logo with link to supplementary files background Layer 1 prag Twitter_Logo_Blue