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- catalog abstract ""Cyberspace entices us with the promise of an online utopia--a web of fluid identities and infinite possibilities. When we look for signs of freedom online--anywhere from chat room conversations to cyberpunk fiction--we are almost inevitably urged toward "liberation" from our bodies and their "restrictive" attributes like race, gender, and age. But cyberculture critic Lisa Nakamura insists that the Internet is a place where race matters. Race itself may not be fixed or finite, but Nakamura argues that racial stereotypes-or "cybertypes"--Are hardwired into our online interactions: Identity tourists masquerade in virtual roles like Asian_Geisha and Alatinolover. Web directories sharply narrow racial categories. Anonymous computer users are assumed to be white. In Cybertypes, Nakamura looks at what happened to race when it went online, and how our ideas about race continue to be shaped and reshaped every time we log on. Examining all facets of our everyday online experience from Internet advertising to email jokes, Nakamura shows that the postmodern ideal of fluid selves made possible by network technology is not necessarily subversive, progressive, or liberating. The harder race is pushed off-line, the greater the consequences in real life for people of color. A lively and provocative discussion Cybertypes offers a valuable new way of thinking about race and identity in the information age." http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0651/2001048945-d.html.".
- catalog contributor b12585184.
- catalog created "2002.".
- catalog date "2002".
- catalog date "2002.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "2002.".
- catalog description ""Cyberspace entices us with the promise of an online utopia--a web of fluid identities and infinite possibilities. When we look for signs of freedom online--anywhere from chat room conversations to cyberpunk fiction--we are almost inevitably urged toward "liberation" from our bodies and their "restrictive" attributes like race, gender, and age. But cyberculture critic Lisa Nakamura insists that the Internet is a place where race matters. Race itself may not be fixed or finite, but Nakamura argues that racial stereotypes-or "cybertypes"--Are hardwired into our online interactions: Identity tourists masquerade in virtual roles like Asian_Geisha and Alatinolover. Web directories sharply narrow racial categories. Anonymous computer users are assumed to be white. In Cybertypes, Nakamura looks at what happened to race when it went online, and how our ideas about race continue to be shaped and reshaped every time we log on. Examining all facets of our everyday online experience from Internet advertising to email jokes, Nakamura shows that the postmodern ideal of fluid selves made possible by network technology is not necessarily subversive, progressive, or liberating. The harder race is pushed off-line, the greater the consequences in real life for people of color. A lively and provocative discussion Cybertypes offers a valuable new way of thinking about race and identity in the information age." http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0651/2001048945-d.html.".
- catalog description "Cybertyping and the work of race in the age of digital reproduction -- Head-hunting on the Internet : identity tourism, avatars, and racial passing in textual and graphic chat spaces -- Race in the construct and the construction of race : the "consensual hallucination" of multiculturalism in the fictions of cyberspace -- "Where do you want to go today?" : cybernetic tourism, the Internet, and transnationality -- Menu-driven identities : making race happen online -- Keeping it (virtually) real : the discourse of cyberspace as an object of knowledge.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. [159]-166) and index.".
- catalog extent "xix, 169 p. :".
- catalog identifier "0415938368 (alk. paper)".
- catalog identifier "0415938376 (pbk. : alk. paper)".
- catalog issued "2002".
- catalog issued "2002.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "New York : Routledge,".
- catalog subject "305.8/00285/4678 21".
- catalog subject "Cyberspace Social aspects.".
- catalog subject "HT1523 .N35 2002".
- catalog subject "Internet Social aspects.".
- catalog subject "Race awareness.".
- catalog subject "Race discrimination.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Cybertyping and the work of race in the age of digital reproduction -- Head-hunting on the Internet : identity tourism, avatars, and racial passing in textual and graphic chat spaces -- Race in the construct and the construction of race : the "consensual hallucination" of multiculturalism in the fictions of cyberspace -- "Where do you want to go today?" : cybernetic tourism, the Internet, and transnationality -- Menu-driven identities : making race happen online -- Keeping it (virtually) real : the discourse of cyberspace as an object of knowledge.".
- catalog title "Cybertypes : race, ethnicity, and identity on the Internet / Lisa Nakamura.".
- catalog type "text".