Coming of age with the internet
Top Cited Papers
- 1 February 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in New Media & Society
- Vol. 8 (1), 73-95
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1461444806059871
Abstract
Analyzing autobiographical essays written by 72 young adult college students, this study investigates how coming of age concurrently with the internet and related technologies has influenced these young people’s lives. An understanding of how the technology is influencing the various domains of their lives provides a window on what internet use may be like for future generations. Essays revealed insights into four primary domains: self, family, real communities, and virtual communities. Within each of these domains, participants’ responses tended to focus on key dualities. Additionally, these young people report a growing dependency on the internet for activities ranging from managing their daily lives to building and maintaining virtual communities.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Life beyond the Screen: Embodiment and Identity through the InternetSociological Review, 2002
- This Is Not Our Fathers' Generation: Web Pages, the Chicago Lyric Opera, and the Philadelphia OrchestraThe Journal of Popular Culture, 2002
- Internet Use and Well‐Being in AdolescenceJournal of Social Issues, 2002
- Internet Paradox RevisitedJournal of Social Issues, 2002
- When Are Net Effects Gross Products? CommunicationJournal of Social Issues, 2002
- Civic Culture Meets the Digital Divide: The Role of Community Electronic NetworksJournal of Social Issues, 2002
- "Connecting" and "Disconnecting" With Civic Life: Patterns of Internet Use and the Production of Social CapitalPolitical Communication, 2001
- Computer networks and political participation: Santa Monica's teledemocracy projectJournal of Applied Communication Research, 1995
- Newspapers and citizenship: Young adults’ subjective experience of newspapersCritical Studies in Mass Communication, 1991
- Grounded theory research: Procedures, canons, and evaluative criteriaQualitative Sociology, 1990