2023 Resources for Research (Archive)
Journal Articles
- Belair-Gagnon, V., Holton, A. E., & Westlund, O. (2019). Space for the liminal. Journal of Media & Communication, 7(4), 1-7.
- Belair-Gagnon, V. & Holton, A. E. (2018). Boundary work, interloper media, and analytics in the newsroom. Digital Journalism, 6(4), 492-508.
- Bossio, D. & Holton, A. E. (2021). Burnout out and turning off: Journalists’ disconnection strategies on social media. Journalism, 22(10), 2475-2492.
- Bossio, D. & Holton, A. E. (2018). The identity dilemma: Identity drivers, decision making, and social media fatigue in journalism. Popular Communication, 16(4), 248-262.
- Citron, D. K., & Norton, H. (2011). Intermediaries and hate speech: Fostering digital citizenship for our information age. BUL Rev., 91, 1435-1460.
- Holton, A. E., Belair-Gagnon, V., & Royal, C. (2021). The human side of (news) engagement: Emotion, platform, and individual agency. Digital Journalism, 9(8), 1184-1189.
- Holton, A. E. & Molyneux, L. (2017). Identity lost? The personal impact of brand journalism. Journalism, 18(2), 195-210.
- Kreiss, D., Lawrence, R. G., & McGregor, S. C. (2020). Political Identity Ownership: Symbolic Contests to Represent Members of the Public. Social Media + Society, 6(2).
- Kreiss, D., & McGregor, S. C. (2023). A review and provocation: On polarization and platforms. New Media & Society, 0(0). Link
- Lane, D. S., Do, K., & Molina-Rogers, N. (2022). Testing Inequality and Identity Accounts of Racial Gaps in Political Expression on Social Media. Political Communication, 39(1), 79-97. doi:10.1080/10584609.2021.1919808
- Lane, D. S., Hansia, A., & Saleem, M. (2023). Effects of pro-white identity cues in American political candidate communication. Human Communication Research, 49(3), 238–250. Link
- Lane, D. S., Moxley, C. M., & McLeod, C. (2023). The Group Roots of Social Media Politics: Social Sorting Predicts Perceptions of and Engagement in Politics on Social Media. Communication Research, 0(0). Link
- Lough, K., Molyneux, L. & Holton, A. E. (2018). A clearer picture: Journalistic identity practices in words and images on Twitter. Journalism Practice, 12(10), 1277-1291.
- McGregor, S. C. (2018). Personalization, social media, and voting: Effects of candidate self-personalization on vote intention. New Media & Society, 20(3), 1139–1160. Link
- McGregor, S. C., Lawrence, R. G., & Cardona, A. (2017). Personalization, gender, and social media: Gubernatorial candidates’ social media strategies. Information, Communication & Society, 20(2), 264-283. doi:10.1080/1369118X.2016.1167228
- McGregor, S. C., & Mourão, R. R. (2016). Talking Politics on Twitter: Gender, Elections, and Social Networks. Social Media + Society, 2(3). Link
- Molyneux, L., Lewis, S. C. & Holton, A. E. (2019). Media work, identity, and motivations that shape branding practices among journalists: An explanatory framework. New Media & Society, 21(4), 836-855.
- Muddiman, A., McGregor, S. C., & Stroud, N. J. (2019). (Re) claiming our expertise: Parsing large text corpora with manually validated and organic dictionaries. Political Communication, 36(2), 214-226.
- Phelan, S., & Maeseele, P. (2023). Where is 'the political' in the journal Political Communication? On the hegemonic articulation of a disciplinary identity. Annals of the International Communication Association, 47(2), 202-221. doi:10.1080/23808985.2023.2169951
- Reddi, M., Kuo, R., & Kreiss, D. (2023). Identity propaganda: Racial narratives and disinformation. New Media & Society, 25(8), 2201–2218. Link
- Sowards, S. K. (2020). Constant civility as corrosion of the soul: surviving through and beyond the politics of politeness. Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies, 17(4), 395-400.
- Stacey, J. (1988). Can there be a feminist ethnography? Women's Studies International Forum, 11(1), 21-27.
- Taylor, S. J., & Aral, S. (2019). What’s in a username? Identity cue effects in social media. SSRN. Link
- Tillmann-Healy, L. M. (2003). Friendship as a Method. Qualitative Inquiry, 9(5), 729–749. Link
- Wells, C., & Friedland, L. A. (2023). Recognition Crisis: Coming to Terms with Identity, Attention and Political Communication in the Twenty-First Century. Political Communication.
- Yin, Yiyi. (2020). An Emergent Algorithmic Culture: The Data-Ization of Online Fandom in China. International Journal of Cultural Studies, 23(4), 475–92. Link
- Zhang, Qian, and Keith Negus. (2020). East Asian Pop Music Idol Production and the Emergence of Data Fandom in China. International Journal of Cultural Studies, 23(4), 493–511. Link
- Zhou, A., Liu, W., Kim, H. M., Lee, E., Shin, J., Zhang, Y., Huang-Isherwood, K. M., Dong, C., & Yang, A. (2022). Moral foundations, ideological divide, and public engagement with U.S. Government agencies’ COVID-19 vaccine communication on social media. Mass Communication and Society. Advance online publication.Link
Books
- Adams, K., & Kreiss, D. (2021). Power in Ideas: A Case-Based Argument for Taking Ideas Seriously in Political Communication (Elements in Politics and Communication). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781108950954
- Baym, N. K. (2018). Playing to the Crowd: Musicians, Audiences, and the Intimate Work of Connection (Postmillennial Pop, 14).
- Bucy, E. P., & Grabe, M. E. (2009). Image Bite Politics: News and the Visual Framing of Elections.
- Chadwick, A. (2013). The Hybrid Media System: Politics and Power (2nd edn).
- McCulloch, G. (2019). Because Internet: Understanding the New Rules of Language.
- Mason, L. (2018). Uncivil agreement: How politics became our identity. University of Chicago Press.
- Said, E. W. (1978). Orientalism (1st ed.). New York: Pantheon Books.
- Sobieraj, S. (2020). Credible Threat: Attacks Against Women Online and the Future of Democracy.
- Strauss, C. (2014). Making Sense of Public Opinion: American Discourses about Immigration and Social Programs. Cambridge University Press.
Online Sources
- Asian American Disinformation Table. (2022, August). Power, Platforms and Politics: A Landscape Report on Asian Americans & Disinformation. Link
- Kuo, R. (n.d.). Episode 5: Across Oceans, Tables, & Platforms. Retrieved July 20, 2021, from Link
- Kuo, R., Malhotra, P., Moran, R., & Nguyễn, S. (2023). Transnational Information Studies Syllabus. The Bulletin of Technology & Public Life. Link
- Le, C., Moran, R. E., Nguyen, A., & Nguyễn, S. (2023). Changing Tides. Link
- Moran, R., Nguyễn, S., & Bui, L. (2023). Sending News Back Home: Misinformation Lost in Transnational Social Networks. Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction, 7(CSCW1), 88:1-88:36. Link
- Nguyễn, S., Kuo, R., Reddi, M., Li, L., & Moran, R. E. (2022). Studying mis- and disinformation in Asian diasporic communities: The need for critical transnational research beyond Anglocentrism. Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review. Link
- Nguyễn, S., Moran, R. E., Nguyen, T.-A., & Bui, L. (2023). “We Never Really Talked About Politics”: Race and Ethnicity as Foundational Forces Structuring Information Disorder Within the Vietnamese Diaspora. Political Communication, 0(0), 1–25. Link
Additional Online Sources
- Academia.edu. (n.d.). https://www.academia.edu/
- Holton, A. E., Belair-Gagnon, V., & Royal, C. (2021). The human side of (news) engagement: Emotion, platform, and individual agency. Digital Journalism, 9(8), 1184-1189.