Presentation given at the 2010 SUNY Empire State College Womens Studies Residency in Saratoga Springs, NY. Access the presentation and supporting website at wsresc.pbworks.com
1. Women, Activism, Identity & the Internet Dr. Lisa D’Adamo-Weinstein, Northeast Center WOMEN’S STUDIES RESIDENCY 2010 Women on the Move: Activism, Revolution, Transformation Saratoga Springs, New York March 11-13, 2010 wsresc.pbworks.com
16. Today in February 2010… http://www.youtube.com/user/ChalutzProductions http://www.youtube.com/user/ChalutzProductions http://www.youtube.com/user/ChalutzProductions http://www.youtube.com/user/ChalutzProductions http://www.youtube.com/user/ChalutzProductions
17. Comparing Women & Men Online “Women are catching up to men in most measures of online life. Men like the internet for the experiences it offers, while women like it for the human connections it promotes.” Source: Pew Internet & American Life Project, 2005
18.
19. Compared with men, online women are more likely to use the internet to: send and receive email, get maps and directions, look for health and medical information, use web sites to get support for health or personal problems, and get religious information. Compared with women, online men are more likely to use the internet to: check the weather, get news, get do-it-yourself information, check for sports information, get political information, get financial information, do job-related research, download software, listen to music, rate a product/person/service through an online reputation system, download music files, use a webcam, and take a class. Source: Pew Internet & American Life Project, 2005
20.
21. Women are more likely than men to use email to write to friends and family about a variety of topics, from sharing news and worries to planning events to forward jokes and funny stories.
22.
23. Across Adult Generations:How are We Online? “Over half of the adult internet population is between 18 and 44 years old. But larger percentages of older generations are online now than in the past, and they are doing more activities online.” Source: Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project surveys taken from 2006-2008.
24. Generations Explained Generation Name Birth Years, Ages in 2009 % of total adult % of internet-using population population Gen Y (Millennials) Born 1977-1990, Ages 18-32 26% 30% Gen X Born 1965-1976, Ages 33-44 20% 23% Younger Boomers Born 1955-1964, Ages 45-54 20% 22% Older Boomers Born 1946-1954, Ages 55-63 13% 13% Silent Generation Born 1937-1945, Ages 64-72 9% 7% G.I. Generation Born -1936, Age 73+ 9% 4% Source: Pew Internet & American Life Project December 2008 survey
27. Internet users ages 12-32 are more likely than older users to read other people’s blogs and to write their own; are considerably more likely than older generations to use social networking sites and to create
28.
29. 80% of Generation X(ages 33-44)internet users buy products online, compared with 71% of internet users ages 18-32, 38% of online teens, 56% of internet users ages 64-72 and 47% of internet users age 73 and older.Video downloads, online travel reservations, and work-related research are now pursued more equally by young and old Broadband access has doubled for many age groups, tripled in oldest groups
41. Young Women & Activism in the Digital Age For young activists, video is their voice By Don Aucoin, Boston Globe Staff | March 5, 2010 When Elisa Kreisinger wanted to protest the newly diminished visibility of gay characters and story lines on television, she didn’t launch a petition drive or write an angry op-ed piece. Instead, like many other members of the YouTube generation for whom the visual language is a native tongue, she found a way to have her say with video rather than words. Kreisinger remixed scenes from “Sex and the City’’ into a pair of pro-gay narratives, and uploaded the resulting videos to her blog, drawing 21,000 hits. “I wouldn’t have done it if it was text-based,’’ said Kreisinger, a 23-year-old Simmons College grad from Cambridge. “Things are more easily communicated through video . . . And there can be more powerful statements.’’
43. International Perspectives The Internet is “providing a new medium for women to work across communities, link up to diasporas and to women from other cultures that share the same concerns about women’s struggle for autonomy and self-determination.” – Wendy Harcourt