Lexington Books
Pages: 328
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7391-7811-9 • Hardback • December 2012 • $147.00 • (£113.00)
978-0-7391-9765-3 • Paperback • May 2014 • $68.99 • (£53.00)
978-0-7391-7812-6 • eBook • December 2012 • $65.50 • (£50.00)
Carolyn Cunningham is assistant professor in the Masters Program in Communication and Leadership Studies at Gonzaga University.
Introduction, Carolyn Cunningham
Part 1. Impression Management Strategies
Chapter 1. Comparing Identity Management Strategies Across Social Media Platforms, Jeffrey H. Kuznekoff
Chapter 2. "Looking the Part" and "Staying True": Balancing Impression Managment on Facebook, Judith Rosenbaum, Benjamin Johnson, Peter Stepman, and Koos Nuijten
Chapter 3. Face-Off: Different Ways Identity is Privileged Through Facebook, Daniel C. Davis, Jessica A. Tougas, Margaeux B. Lippman, and Timothy W. Morris
Part 2. Identity in Professional Contexts
Chapter 4. Compressed Crystals: A Metaphor for Mediated Identity Expression, Bree McEwan and Jennifer J. Mease
Chapter 5. Branding as Social Discourse: Identity Construction on Social and Professional Networking Sites, Corey Jay Liberman
Chapter 6. Like Us on Facebook and Follow Us on Twitter: Corporate Identity Management Across Social Media Platforms, Binod Sundararajan and Malavika Sundararajan
Part 3. Managing Intersectionality
Chapter 7. Virtual Closets: Strategic Identity Construction and Social Media, Bruce E. Drushel
Chapter 8. The Performative Possibilities of Social Media: Antoine Johnson, Amber Johnson
Chapter 9. Using Social Media to Develop a Transgender Identity in a Virtual Community, Sara Green-Hamann and John C. Sherblom
Part 4. The Light and Dark Side of Impression Management
Chapter 10. Face Threatening Messages and Attraction in Social Networking Sites: Reconciling Strategic Self-Presentation with Negative Online Perceptions, Nicholas Brody and Jorge Peña
Chapter 11. Psychological Benefits and Costs: A Self-Affirmation Framework for Understanding the Effects of Facebook Self-Presentation, Catalina Toma
Chapter 12. What You Can Really Know about Someone from Their Facebook Profile (And Where You Should Look to Find Out), Jeffrey A. Hall and Natalie Pennington
An extremely useful collection of meticulous and well-chosen cases, encompassing a range of theoretical and practical issues.
— David J. Phillips, University of Toronto