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Based on a study using online ethnography as the major research method, this book explains why and how men in Hong Kong use QQ—an online instant messenger—to “chase” women in mainland China, especially in the neighboring city of Shenzhen. Chasing women through QQ is a reciprocal exchange process during which the resources to be exchanged in the interaction are not negotiated. Rather, the men provide resources to the women, hoping for rewards in return that are not guaranteed. This characteristic of the exchange makes men who chase women through QQ very strategic in their action. They try to maximize the rewards and minimize the costs by adopting myriad strategies, such as constructing an attractive online identity by strategic self-presentation. The role of emotions in the exchange process is also examined. Men learn the emotional norms through the online forum, but sometimes it is difficult for them to control their emotions; some men fall in love when they are not supposed to. As it happens, they have failed to calculate the costs and rewards rationally in that they may provide too many resources to the women without getting enough rewards in return. This book provides original insights into the thought processes, motivations, desires, anxieties and risks of Hong Kong men seeking short-term sexual relations with women on the mainland. These insights are highly relevant to our understanding of the quickly evolving use of social media, a phenomenon of worldwide importance and deep implications.
Journalism & Communications --- Communication & Mass Media --- Online dating --- Dating (Social customs) --- Internet dating --- On-line dating --- Web dating --- World Wide Web dating --- Dates (Social engagements) --- Social sciences. --- Communication. --- Sociology. --- Mass media. --- Social Sciences. --- Media Research. --- Interpersonal relations --- Manners and customs --- Communication, Primitive --- Mass communication --- Sociology --- Media, Mass --- Media, The --- Communication --- Social theory --- Social sciences --- Behavioral sciences --- Human sciences --- Sciences, Social --- Social science --- Social studies --- Civilization
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Primary groups --- Philosophy and psychology of culture --- Computer architecture. Operating systems --- Online dating --- Dating (Social customs) --- Computer network resources --- Online dating. --- -392.6 --- 316.77 --- Internet dating --- On-line dating --- Web dating --- World Wide Web dating --- Seksualiteit. Seksueel leven. Concubinaat. Samenwonen. Prostitutie. Erotiek. Seksuele gebruiken. Liefdeskunst --- Communicatiesociologie --- 316.77 Communicatiesociologie --- 392.6 Seksualiteit. Seksueel leven. Concubinaat. Samenwonen. Prostitutie. Erotiek. Seksuele gebruiken. Liefdeskunst --- 392.6 --- Informatique --- Computer science --- Innovations technologiques --- Dating (Social customs) - Computer network resources --- Relations amoureuses --- Sites Web de rencontres
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Online dating --- 392.4/.5 --- #SBIB:309H103 --- #SBIB:309H1713 --- #SBIB:316.356.2H3210 --- #SBIB:316.7C121 --- Internet dating --- On-line dating --- Web dating --- World Wide Web dating --- Dating (Social customs) --- 392.4/.5 Verloving. Huwelijk. Huwelijksgebruiken. Partnerkeuze. Polyandrie. Polygamie. Monogamie --- Verloving. Huwelijk. Huwelijksgebruiken. Partnerkeuze. Polyandrie. Polygamie. Monogamie --- Mediatechnologie / ICT / digitale media: sociale en culturele aspecten --- Mediatechnologie: nieuwe toepassingen (abonnee-televisie, electronic mail, desk top publishing, virtuele realiteit...) --- Partnerkeuze: kennismaking, verkering, verloving: algemeen --- Cultuursociologie: gedragspatronen, levensstijl
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"In Up to Date, Tong and Van Der Heide explore the spicy, unsetting-and sometimes just exhausting-universe of digital romance. As dating platforms like Bumble, Tinder, and Grindr proliferate, scholars have had to stretch their understandings of how courtship works, often arriving at fascinatingly counterintuitive theories about how twenty-first century daters shape online identities, select mates, mediate conflict, and maintain or terminate romantic relationships. This book guides readers through an increasingly complex and extensive literature, highlighting strengths and weaknesses of existing approaches, while establishing new avenues for the future. Written for both students and seasoned experts alike, the book also addresses the largely invisible underpinnings of what has become a multibillion-dollar industry, including propriety algorithms and perverse economic incentives. Up to Date is a provocative and rigorous must-read for anyone who seeks to understand or conduct research regarding the social science of online romance"--
Online dating --- Dating (Social customs) --- Dating services --- Internet --- Courtship --- Love --- Courtships --- Interpersonal relations --- Manners and customs --- Dates (Social engagements) --- Social aspects --- Service industries --- Agencies, Dating --- Dating agencies --- Matchmaking services --- Services, Dating --- Internet dating --- On-line dating --- Web dating --- World Wide Web dating --- #SBIB:309H103 --- #SBIB:309H1713 --- #SBIB:316.356.2H3210 --- #SBIB:316.356.2H3250 --- Mediatechnologie / ICT / digitale media: sociale en culturele aspecten --- Mediatechnologie: nieuwe toepassingen (abonnee-televisie, electronic mail, desk top publishing, virtuele realiteit...) --- Partnerkeuze: kennismaking, verkering, verloving: algemeen --- Huwelijksbemiddeling: algemeen
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‘Immigrants on Grindr expands our understanding of digital culture, offering new insights into the ways LGBTQ people use dating and hook-up apps. Shield’s research also gives a voice to gay and queer migrants and the racism they face in their daily lives as the craft new lives in foreign lands.’ —Sharif Mowlabocus, Fordham University, USA ‘With theoretical elegance and ethnographic empathy, Shield explores a range of arousing, wounding, and life-affirming connections against exclusionary forces of digital dating classifications and sexual racism.’ —Jonathan Corpus Ong, Associate Professor of Global Digital Media, University of Massachusetts Amherst ‘Shield draws on rich empirical material to make significant contributions to debates about homonationalism, sexual racism, and the role of hook-up apps in shaping contemporary socio-sexual relations. He provides valuable insights into the ways these apps can facilitate those who are 'new in town' to settle into their surroundings.’ —Gavin Brown, Professor of Political Geography and Sexualities, University of Leicester This book examines the role of hook-up apps in the lives of gay, bi, trans, and queer immigrants and refugees, and how the online culture of these platforms promotes belonging or exclusion. Within the context of the so-called European refugee crisis, this research focuses on the experiences of immigrants from especially Muslim-majority countries to the greater Copenhagen area, a region known for both its progressive ideologies and its anti-immigrant practices. Grindr and similar platforms connect newcomers with not only dates and sex, but also friends, roommates and other logistical contacts. But these socio-sexual platforms also become spaces of racialization and othering. Weaving together analyses of real Grindr profile texts, immigrant narratives, political rhetoric, and popular media, Immigrants on Grindr provides an in-depth look at the complex interplay between online and offline cultures, and between technology and society.
Online dating. --- Muslim gays --- Gay immigrants --- Immigrants --- Gay Muslims --- Gays --- Internet dating --- On-line dating --- Web dating --- World Wide Web dating --- Dating (Social customs) --- Social networks. --- Communication. --- Culture. --- Gender. --- Motion pictures. --- Queer theory. --- Technology. --- Media and Communication. --- Culture and Gender. --- Queer Studies. --- Culture and Technology. --- Applied science --- Arts, Useful --- Science, Applied --- Useful arts --- Science --- Industrial arts --- Material culture --- Gender identity --- Cinema --- Feature films --- Films --- Movies --- Moving-pictures --- Audio-visual materials --- Mass media --- Performing arts --- Cultural sociology --- Culture --- Sociology of culture --- Civilization --- Popular culture --- Communication, Primitive --- Mass communication --- Sociology --- History and criticism --- Social aspects
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The spread of the Internet is remaking marriage markets, altering the process of courtship and the geographic trajectory of intimacy in the 21st century. For some Latin American women and U.S. men, the advent of the cybermarriage industry offers new opportunities for re-making themselves and their futures, overthrowing the common narrative of trafficking and exploitation. In this engaging, stimulating virtual ethnography, Felicity Amaya Schaeffer follows couples’ romantic interludes at “Vacation Romance Tours,” in chat rooms, and interviews married couples in the United States in order to understand the commercialization of intimacy. While attending to the interplay between the everyday and the virtual, Love and Empire contextualizes personal desires within the changing global economic and political shifts across the Americas. By examining current immigration policies and the use of Mexican and Colombian women as erotic icons of the nation in the global marketplace, she forges new relations between intimate imaginaries and state policy in the making of new markets, finding that women’s erotic self-fashioning is the form through which women become ideal citizens, of both their home countries and in the United States. Through these little-explored, highly mediated romantic exchanges, Love and Empire unveils a fresh perspective on the continually evolving relationship between the U.S. and Latin America.
Citizenship --- Online dating --- Intermarriage --- Birthright citizenship --- Citizenship (International law) --- National citizenship --- Nationality (Citizenship) --- Political science --- Public law --- Allegiance --- Civics --- Domicile --- Political rights --- Internet dating --- On-line dating --- Web dating --- World Wide Web dating --- Dating (Social customs) --- Marriage, Mixed --- Mixed marriage --- Marriage --- Law and legislation --- 314.74 <73> --- 392.4/.5 <73> --- 392.4/.5 <73> Verloving. Huwelijk. Huwelijksgebruiken. Partnerkeuze. Polyandrie. Polygamie. Monogamie--VSA. USA. Verenigde Staten van Amerika --- Verloving. Huwelijk. Huwelijksgebruiken. Partnerkeuze. Polyandrie. Polygamie. Monogamie--VSA. USA. Verenigde Staten van Amerika --- Buitenlandse migratie. Emigratie. Immigratie. Remigratie. Repatriering --(demografie)--Verenigde Staten van Amerika. VSA. USA
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This book challenges assumptions about the motivations that drive women from relatively poor, developing countries to use intermarriage dating sites to find partners from relatively wealthy, developed countries. It is generally assumed that economic deprivation or economic opportunities are the main factors, but this book instead focuses on the work of women’s imagination in online cross-cultural relationships, including the role of desire, love and intimacy. The experiences of Thai women are used to explore how they initiate, develop and maintain love and intimacy with Western men across distance and time. The book shows that, in the absence of opportunities to search and meet partners from geographically distant parts of the world, the technology of the internet offers new ways of searching for and managing relationships and has significant consequences for local experiences and expectations of love and partnering. The book will be of interest to scholars and students with an interest in family and intimate life, gender and sexualities, Asian and Thai studies, globalization and nationalism, culture and media, sociology and anthropology. .
392.4/.5 --- Verloving. Huwelijk. Huwelijksgebruiken. Partnerkeuze. Polyandrie. Polygamie. Monogamie --- Social sciences. --- Sociology. --- Religion and culture. --- Mass media. --- Communication. --- Social sciences in mass media. --- Ethnicity. --- Sex (Psychology). --- Gender expression. --- Gender identity. --- Social Sciences. --- Sociology of Culture. --- Ethnicity Studies. --- Gender Studies. --- Media Sociology. --- 392.4/.5 Verloving. Huwelijk. Huwelijksgebruiken. Partnerkeuze. Polyandrie. Polygamie. Monogamie --- Online dating. --- Interethnic dating. --- Cross-cultural dating --- Dating, Interethnic --- Internet dating --- On-line dating --- Web dating --- World Wide Web dating --- Sex identity (Gender identity) --- Sexual identity (Gender identity) --- Identity (Psychology) --- Sex (Psychology) --- Queer theory --- Expression, Gender --- Sex role --- Psychology, Sexual --- Sex --- Sexual behavior, Psychology of --- Sexual psychology --- Sensuality --- Mass media --- Communication, Primitive --- Mass communication --- Sociology --- Ethnic identity --- Group identity --- Cultural fusion --- Multiculturalism --- Cultural pluralism --- Media, Mass --- Media, The --- Communication --- Culture and religion --- Culture --- Social theory --- Social sciences --- Behavioral sciences --- Human sciences --- Sciences, Social --- Social science --- Social studies --- Civilization --- Psychological aspects --- Dating (Social customs) --- Culture. --- Cultural sociology --- Sociology of culture --- Popular culture --- Social aspects
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This volume discusses the phenomenon of internet infidelity by looking at the psychological, social, legal, and technological aspects involved in such behaviour. The rise of social media as well as technological advancements that create ‘real’ experiences online have made it possible for people to engage in multiple kinds of online relationships. These create concerns about regulating such activities via national and international law, as well as psychological and social concerns of understanding the overall impact of such behaviour. Therefore, this volume, which includes perspectives from across the world, asks and addresses some fundamental questions: Does internet infidelity amount to cheating? How is virtual infidelity different from actual infidelity? What are the social, interpersonal and psychological impacts of internet infidelity? Do people in different cultures view online infidelity differently? What are the myths associated with online infidelity? What are the various intervention measures or therapeutic techniques for treating people who are addicted to cybersex or pornography? The legal dimensions of internet cheating are equally important since adultery is considered as a criminal offence in some countries. As yet, there is no universally accepted definition of internet infidelity and legal perspectives become very important in understanding the phenomenon. This volume includes grand theory approaches as well as detailed case studies and provides unique and multidisciplinary insights into internet cheating. It is ideal for marital therapists, counsellors, criminologists, legislators, and both researchers and students.
Computer sex. --- Online dating. --- Adultery. --- Betrayal. --- Sexual ethics. --- Sex --- Sex ethics --- Sexual behavior, Ethics of --- Adulterous relationships --- Cheating, Marital --- Extra-marital sex --- Extramarital sex --- Infidelity, Marital --- Marital cheating --- Marital infidelity --- Internet dating --- On-line dating --- Web dating --- World Wide Web dating --- Cyber sex --- Cyber sexing --- Cybersex --- Internet sex --- On-line sex --- Online sex --- Moral and ethical aspects --- Civil law. --- Computer crimes. --- Psychology. --- Criminology and Criminal Justice. --- Cybercrime. --- Law and Psychology. --- Civil Law. --- Ethics --- Marriage --- Sex crimes --- Paramours --- Dating (Social customs) --- Law --- Psychological aspects. --- Law, Civil --- Private law --- Roman law --- Juridical psychology --- Juristic psychology --- Legal psychology --- Psychology, Juridical --- Psychology, Juristic --- Psychology, Legal --- Psychology, Applied --- Therapeutic jurisprudence --- Computers and crime --- Cyber crimes --- Cybercrimes --- Electronic crimes (Computer crimes) --- Internet crimes --- Crime --- Privacy, Right of --- Psychology --- Behavioral sciences --- Mental philosophy --- Mind --- Science, Mental --- Human biology --- Philosophy --- Soul --- Mental health
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Computers have changed not just the way we work but the way we love. Falling in and out of love, flirting, cheating, even having sex online have all become part of the modern way of living and loving. Yet we know very little about these new types of relationship. How is an online affair where the two people involved may never see or meet each other different from an affair in the real world? Is online sex still cheating on your partner? Why do people tell complete strangers their most intimate secrets? What are the rules of engagement? Will online affairs change the monogamous nature of romantic relationships? These are just some of the questions Professor Aaron Ben Ze'ev, distinguished writer and academic, addresses in this book, a full-length study of love online. Accessible, shocking, entertaining, enlightening, this book will change the way you look at cyberspace and love forever.
Love --- Man-woman relationships --- Mate selection --- Online dating. --- Internet. --- DARPA Internet --- Internet (Computer network) --- Wide area networks (Computer networks) --- World Wide Web --- Internet dating --- On-line dating --- Web dating --- World Wide Web dating --- Dating (Social customs) --- Courtship --- Interpersonal relations --- Marriage brokerage --- Female-male relationships --- Male-female relationships --- Men --- Men-women relationships --- Relationships, Man-woman --- Woman-man relationships --- Women --- Women-men relationships --- Affection --- Emotions --- First loves --- Friendship --- Intimacy (Psychology) --- Computer network resources. --- Relations with women --- Relations with men --- Internet --- Computer network resources --- Amour --- Relations entre hommes et femmes --- Choix du conjoint --- Ressources Internet --- Sociology of the family. Sociology of sexuality --- Computer architecture. Operating systems --- Health Sciences --- Psychiatry & Psychology --- Love - Computer network resources --- Man-woman relationships - Computer network resources --- Mate selection - Computer network resources --- Dating (Social customs) - Computer network resources --- Relationships --- Seduce --- Book
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"How dating apps are empowering women and sexual minorities in China, even as they reveal and reproduce systematic sexism and heteronormativity"--
Online dating --- Mobile apps --- Sex --- Femininity --- Sexual minorities --- Apps, Mobile --- Mobile applications --- Application software --- Mobile computing --- Gender minorities --- GLBT people --- GLBTQ people --- Lesbigay people --- LBG people --- LGBT people --- LGBTQ people --- Non-heterosexual people --- Non-heterosexuals --- Sexual dissidents --- Minorities --- Femininity (Psychology) --- Sex (Psychology) --- Women --- Gender (Sex) --- Human beings --- Human sexuality --- Sex (Gender) --- Sexual behavior --- Sexual practices --- Sexuality --- Sexology --- Internet dating --- On-line dating --- Web dating --- World Wide Web dating --- Dating (Social customs) --- Social aspects --- dating apps --- hookup apps --- gender politics --- gender relations --- queer --- LGBTQ --- interpretive flexibility --- affordance --- networked publics --- sexual publics --- sex apps --- social apps --- hook-up apps --- location-aware --- location-based --- networking apps --- Grindr --- Tinder --- Blued --- Momo --- Rela --- feminism --- technofeminism --- leftover women --- gender performance --- gender performativity --- hegemonic masculinity --- sexual harassment --- sexual minorities --- affects --- heteronormativity --- social construction of technology --- interpretation --- publics --- digital media --- digital cultures --- mobile cultures --- China --- Chinese --- East Asia --- Global South
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