Title: Gender, Writing, and the Web:
1Gender, Writing, and the Web
- Considerations of web use, web navigation, fan
avatars
Dr. Jennifer L. Bowie For Gender and Writing
March 27, 2008
2Overview
- Internet and web use
- Sex gender differences in web navigation
- Harry Potter fan avatar recent research
3Image from Internet The mainstreaming of Online
life Pew Report http//www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/I
nternet_Status_2005.pdf page 60.
4Image from Internet The mainstreaming of Online
life Pew Report http//www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/I
nternet_Status_2005.pdf page 61.
5Tool vs Toy?
- Men play with technology, women use it as a tool
(Barnum 370) - According to Kantrowitz
- Males see computers as a male-machine bonding
thing (like cars), are seduced by the
technology, and see technology as a status symbol
and almost a virtual religion - Females see computers as something to be used for
work (177). - OConnor suggests
- Men see technology as a gadget to explore, as
something to play with and as entertainment men
are more positive about technology - Women see technology as a time saving device (1)
- Tannen says, most women want one thing from a
computerfor it to work (185). - Females are interested in information and not
interested in getting the computer to submit
(185). - Nicholson found that
- Men see technology as area of bragging rights
- Women are more interested in seeing if the
computer works well enough to accomplish their
tasks (188). - And you?
6Interest in computers?
- Females and males have equal interests in
computers until fifth grade, when males computer
use increases, and females computer use
decreases (Kantrowitz 178). - Why might this be?
7Differences in Net Use
- Men are significantly more likely to view sex
sites online and are more likely to report
relaxation and escape as the primary reason
for using the Internet (Knox et al. 3). - Women are more likely to lie (43 to 35) (Knox
et al. 3). - More males than females are addicted to sex and
the Internet (9.9 compared to 4) (Kelsey 1). - When using the net for sex females focused on
relationships and used Internet chat features
whereas males were more visual (Kelsey 1). - Boys were more interested in learning about
technology, playing games and building Web
pages whereas girls were more
goal-orientated, using their time online to
read publications, do homework, and communicate
with others (Bowman1). - Males visit more sites than females do (301.2 to
271 pages) (Bowman) - Women are more loyal in their website usage
patterns and men prefer browsing the whole
Internet (Bowman 2). - Females experience higher levels of anxiety
online and thus were less likely to use the web
for entertainment and to pass time (Tewksbury and
Althaus 131).
8Talking online
- Youth dialogue in KIDCAFE roughly supports
Tannens theory of female rapport talk and male
report talk (Michel) - Women were more likely to initiate agreements in
online communication, equally likely to initiate
disagreements, but were less likely to challenge
others or speak in their own defense (Wolfe 153).
- Female collaborators often discussed more than
their male collaborators (Duin and Archee) - Gender a bigger indicator than sex those who
tested as feminine less likely to participate in
all class discussions (on and offline) and those
who tested as masculine and androgynous
participated more (Rickly 137). - Computer voices with the same scripts (Nass and
Moon) - Female voiced computers were seen as less
friendly, less complimentary, less compelling,
but more informative about the topic of love and
relationships - Male voiced computers were seen as more competent
and informative about computer and related topics
9Web as a Clubhouse for Girls?
- Pamela Takayoshi along with Emily Huot and Meghan
Huot (Takayoshis stepdaughters) look
particularly at how girls use their websites. - Computer culture for many females is an
inhospitable and sometimes dangerous space for
girls, or females in general and is an electric
clubhouse for boys (89). - Some girls are actively weaving the web,
creating corners of the web that reflect girls
interests, values, and solidarity (90). - Girls are using the web as a space to share
their voices and ideas with real audiences (95) - The female presence on the web is bold, loud,
and proud (95) - The Web is a productive venue for girls
self-expression.. Gives girls a place for
self-expression while intimately involving them
in the working of technology (104) - Girls are not only using the web, but are
creating or recreating it with their own voices
and websites
10How do you navigate?
11Landmarks, Links, Search Engines
- Global landmark
- Sex gender
- Sex
- Opposite use of methods
- Initial navigation Females most often used
global and males landmark - Complete navigation Females most often used
landmark and males global - Gender
- Initial navigation Feminine used landmark (4),
masculine used global (4), androgynous and
undifferentiated used global (3) - Complete navigation Masculine used global (2),
androgynous and undifferentiated used global for
one and landmark for the other, Females used
landmark or mixed - What do these finding mean for web design? Web
writing? Arrangement and delivery?
12Harry Potter Fan Avatars 1
- Method
- Examined the forum of two popular Harry Potter
Fan sites - Site 1 was avatar heavy and the majority
disclosed their sex - Site 2 had less avatars and few disclosed their
sex - Gathered 40 female avatars
- Analyzed the avatars for self-identity, voice,
and power - Initial findings
- Of 101 unique avatars
- 59 do not disclose their sex (only 1 from site 1)
- 2 self-identified as male (both on site 2)
- 40 self-identified as female
13Harry Potter Fan Avatars Findings
- Sex gender
- 17 have a feminine theme
- 4 have a masculine theme
- 15 are of females
- 16 are of males
- 9 have multiple people (3 are all male, the rest
male female)
14Harry Potter Fan Avatars Findings
- Attributes
- 14 are strong
- 10 are powerful
- 6 are weak
- 1 is sexy
- 9 are pretty
- 8 are cute
- 8 are childlike
- 6 have attitude
- 4 are smart
15Harry Potter Fan Avatars Findings
- Traditional Depictions?
- 18 had traditional feminine depictions
- 6 had non-traditional depictions
- 5 of those also had traditional elements
16Harry Potter Fan Avatars Summary
- 42 are feminine only 10 masculine
- Females were slightly more likely to select male
avatars than a female (16 to 15) - 35 were strong, 25 powerful, and only 15 weak
- Only 2 were sexy, but 23 pretty and 20 are
cute - 23 were childlike, but 15 had attitude
- 45 are traditional depictions of the female,
only 15 had non-traditional depictions, but 13
include both traditional and non-traditional - Many females may not be disclosing their sex
- Females are much more likely to have avatars than
males - Some females are weaving and authoring strong
feminist identities online, but too many stay
with the traditional and thus reinforce the
problematic
17Questions
- What do these findings say about voice, writing,
rhetoric, representation, and gender online? - How can we empower females to visualize and
identify themselves in feminist ways? - Why are self-identifying females more likely to
use avatars? - Why do they choose their avatars and what are
they trying to say/do with them? - What do these avatars say about females as
authors and agents of their identity? What does
it mean that they are using outside images?
18Other Questions Discussion
- jbowie_at_gsu.edu
- www.screenspace.org