"Lots of parents misinterpret it...": A study of the construction of body image in young people's use of social media

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference abstract in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Standard

"Lots of parents misinterpret it..." : A study of the construction of body image in young people's use of social media. / Frydendal, Stine; Thing, Lone Friis.

2022 EASS & ISSA World Congress of Sociology of Sport. 7-10 June 2022, Tübingen, Germany: Book of Abstracts: Why Does Sociology Matter? The Role of Sport Sociology in Interdisciplinary Research. European Association for the Sociology of Sport, 2022. p. 25-25 23.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference abstract in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Frydendal, S & Thing, LF 2022, "Lots of parents misinterpret it...": A study of the construction of body image in young people's use of social media. in 2022 EASS & ISSA World Congress of Sociology of Sport. 7-10 June 2022, Tübingen, Germany: Book of Abstracts: Why Does Sociology Matter? The Role of Sport Sociology in Interdisciplinary Research., 23, European Association for the Sociology of Sport, pp. 25-25. <https://issaeass2022.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/eass-ISSA-2022-Congress-Abstract-Book-2022.05.26.pdf>

APA

Frydendal, S., & Thing, L. F. (2022). "Lots of parents misinterpret it...": A study of the construction of body image in young people's use of social media. In 2022 EASS & ISSA World Congress of Sociology of Sport. 7-10 June 2022, Tübingen, Germany: Book of Abstracts: Why Does Sociology Matter? The Role of Sport Sociology in Interdisciplinary Research (pp. 25-25). [23] European Association for the Sociology of Sport. https://issaeass2022.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/eass-ISSA-2022-Congress-Abstract-Book-2022.05.26.pdf

Vancouver

Frydendal S, Thing LF. "Lots of parents misinterpret it...": A study of the construction of body image in young people's use of social media. In 2022 EASS & ISSA World Congress of Sociology of Sport. 7-10 June 2022, Tübingen, Germany: Book of Abstracts: Why Does Sociology Matter? The Role of Sport Sociology in Interdisciplinary Research. European Association for the Sociology of Sport. 2022. p. 25-25. 23

Author

Frydendal, Stine ; Thing, Lone Friis. / "Lots of parents misinterpret it..." : A study of the construction of body image in young people's use of social media. 2022 EASS & ISSA World Congress of Sociology of Sport. 7-10 June 2022, Tübingen, Germany: Book of Abstracts: Why Does Sociology Matter? The Role of Sport Sociology in Interdisciplinary Research. European Association for the Sociology of Sport, 2022. pp. 25-25

Bibtex

@inbook{ba7eb65d718d4dcbb6c5241197af1585,
title = "{"}Lots of parents misinterpret it...{"}: A study of the construction of body image in young people's use of social media",
abstract = "The increasing digitalization of society offers a wealth of opportunities for adolescents. But to comprehend the many enabling aspects, it{\textquoteright}s important also to recognize the constraining aspects of technology. Sociologically, there is a generation divide between youth as digital natives and older generations as digital immigrants. In recent years, the use of digital technology in relation to training and exercise among young people has developed rapidly, and we are still challenged in terms of understanding their digital training culture. This paper discusses how young people understand the role of social media related to the construction of body image connected to online training culture. The empirical material consists of 28 individual interviews with 14 students (age 13-15) in 2 Danish secondary schools. We draw on Lupton{\textquoteright}s conceptualization of the digitized body, self-tracking and presentation of the self on social media. The adolescents of this study all use social media, but they take a quite critical position when it comes to displaying the body online in relation to exercise and training. As such they understand themselves as far more reflected and critical in their use of digital technologies than the older generations give them credit for. The paper contributes to a further understanding of how young people navigate and position themselves on social media when it comes to displaying the sporting body online and how this is part of their body image construction. Hopefully, this can decrease the divide between young people as digital natives and the digital immigrants of older generations.",
author = "Stine Frydendal and Thing, {Lone Friis}",
note = "(Abstract)",
year = "2022",
language = "English",
pages = "25--25",
booktitle = "2022 EASS & ISSA World Congress of Sociology of Sport. 7-10 June 2022, T{\"u}bingen, Germany",
publisher = "European Association for the Sociology of Sport",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - "Lots of parents misinterpret it..."

T2 - A study of the construction of body image in young people's use of social media

AU - Frydendal, Stine

AU - Thing, Lone Friis

N1 - (Abstract)

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - The increasing digitalization of society offers a wealth of opportunities for adolescents. But to comprehend the many enabling aspects, it’s important also to recognize the constraining aspects of technology. Sociologically, there is a generation divide between youth as digital natives and older generations as digital immigrants. In recent years, the use of digital technology in relation to training and exercise among young people has developed rapidly, and we are still challenged in terms of understanding their digital training culture. This paper discusses how young people understand the role of social media related to the construction of body image connected to online training culture. The empirical material consists of 28 individual interviews with 14 students (age 13-15) in 2 Danish secondary schools. We draw on Lupton’s conceptualization of the digitized body, self-tracking and presentation of the self on social media. The adolescents of this study all use social media, but they take a quite critical position when it comes to displaying the body online in relation to exercise and training. As such they understand themselves as far more reflected and critical in their use of digital technologies than the older generations give them credit for. The paper contributes to a further understanding of how young people navigate and position themselves on social media when it comes to displaying the sporting body online and how this is part of their body image construction. Hopefully, this can decrease the divide between young people as digital natives and the digital immigrants of older generations.

AB - The increasing digitalization of society offers a wealth of opportunities for adolescents. But to comprehend the many enabling aspects, it’s important also to recognize the constraining aspects of technology. Sociologically, there is a generation divide between youth as digital natives and older generations as digital immigrants. In recent years, the use of digital technology in relation to training and exercise among young people has developed rapidly, and we are still challenged in terms of understanding their digital training culture. This paper discusses how young people understand the role of social media related to the construction of body image connected to online training culture. The empirical material consists of 28 individual interviews with 14 students (age 13-15) in 2 Danish secondary schools. We draw on Lupton’s conceptualization of the digitized body, self-tracking and presentation of the self on social media. The adolescents of this study all use social media, but they take a quite critical position when it comes to displaying the body online in relation to exercise and training. As such they understand themselves as far more reflected and critical in their use of digital technologies than the older generations give them credit for. The paper contributes to a further understanding of how young people navigate and position themselves on social media when it comes to displaying the sporting body online and how this is part of their body image construction. Hopefully, this can decrease the divide between young people as digital natives and the digital immigrants of older generations.

M3 - Conference abstract in proceedings

SP - 25

EP - 25

BT - 2022 EASS & ISSA World Congress of Sociology of Sport. 7-10 June 2022, Tübingen, Germany

PB - European Association for the Sociology of Sport

ER -

ID: 320865712