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Hooking up with friends: LGBTQ+ young people, dating apps, friendship and safety

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posted on 2024-07-11, 14:26 authored by Paul Byron, Kath AlburyKath Albury, Tinonee Pym
Research exploring digital intimate publics tends to consider social media platforms and dating/hook-up apps separately, implying distance between social and sexual communication practices. This paper troubles that delineation by drawing on LGBTQ+ young people’s accounts of negotiating safety and risk in dating/hook-up apps, in which friendship practices are significant. We explore four key themes of friendship that arose in our analysis of interviews and workshop discussions: sharing mutuals (or friends-in-common) with potential dates/hook-ups; making friends through apps; friends supporting app negotiations; and friends’ involvement in safety strategies. Through analysis of these data, we firstly argue that friendship is often both an outcome and an organising force of LGBTQ+ young people’s uses of dating/hook-up apps, and secondly, that media sites commonly defined as social (e.g. Instagram) or sexual (e.g. Tinder) are imbricated, with friendship contouring queer sex and dating practices.

Funding

ARC | LP160101687

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PDF (Accepted manuscript)

ISSN

0163-4437

Journal title

Media, Culture & Society

Volume

43

Issue

3

Article number

016344372097231

Pagination

497-514

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2020 the authors. This is the authors' final (peer reviewed) manuscript, which was accepted for publication. Reuse of the Accepted Version is restricted to non-commercial and no derivative uses. Users may also download and save a local copy for the user's personal reference.

Language

eng

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