ALJUWAISER, Ghayda Abdullah (2019). Saudi Women’s Identities and their Online Practices Across Social Media Platforms. Doctoral, Sheffield Hallam University. [Thesis]
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Aljuwaiser_2019_PhD_SaudiWomen'sIdentities.pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.
Aljuwaiser_2019_PhD_SaudiWomen'sIdentities.pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.
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Abstract
This thesis investigatesthe relationship between Saudi women’s identities in the offline
sphere and their online practices on social media platforms (SMP), namely Facebook,
Twitter, Instagram, Path, and Goodreads. The theoretical lens of Social Identity theory
positions its contribution within the field of Sociology, specifically Digital Sociology
(DS). The research questions the thesis addresses are: 1) How has the relationship and
negotiation between Saudi women’s identities and their online practices on SMP
evolved and changed? 2) How do Saudi women represent their identities across SMP?
3) Do Saudi women develop and represent their identities differently across SMP
depending on the medium and their use of it? If so, then how?
A multi-method qualitative approach is adopted, including online observations and
semi-structured interviews. Following purposive and snowballing sampling, twelve
Saudi women, who are active SMP users from different cities in Saudi Arabia (Jeddah,
Riyadh, Kharj and Dammam/Alkhobar) were recruited. The findings lead to four main
contributions, which empirically add to and conceptually extend existing literature on
the relationship between SMP practices and women’s identities: a) establishing the
reminiscence of online practices as one factor through which Saudi women’s identities
are reshaped; b) developing the understanding of SMP ecology whereby Saudi women
develop different online identities across different platforms, their online practices vary
across SMP that they perceive as different environments, and Saudi women cautiously
manage contexts’ collapse/divide with different audiences across SMP in nuanced
ways; c) recognising the heterogeneity of Saudi women’s positions towards religious
and cultural transformations – namely, veiling, online activism, women's rights and
(Saudi) feminism; d) stressing the importance of studying these digital phenomena
from a Digital Sociology perspective.
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