Posts tagged: YouTube

Social Media, Digital Video and Health Promotion

My new refereed journal article has been published online by Health Promotion International. It identifies opportunities and challenges when using social media and digital video for health promotion with communities from diverse cultural and linguistic backgrounds in Australia, including migrants and refugees.

The piece focuses on:

  • the concept of ‘participation’
  • the relationship between ‘old school’ forms of community driven digital video production and the online, re-mixed world of YouTube
  • the ways in which language, literacy, educational level, age, gender and other factors shape experiences with the internet
  • how social media risk becoming exclusive forms of heath and wellbeing communication.

From this perspective, it provides evidence-based recommendations for practice and future research.

What I like most about this article is the sense of history it creates. It proposes integrating ‘online’ modes of communication with previous ‘offline’ techniques for encouraging participation.

The abstract is available or if you’d like to know more feel free to contact me. Other relevant work:

Digital Technology, Diabetes and Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Communities: A Case Study with Elderly Women from the Vietnamese Community

Sending the Right Message

This Is Not A Hobby

The Emerging Writers Festival was held in Melbourne last month. They ran some great sessions about opportunities, challenges, tips and tricks for writing and publishing in Australia. Being a writer is tough. Support networks do exist, however, and it’s refreshing to feel more connected in real world spaces when writing can be such a solitary pursuit. I only went to the festival’s opening night (which was very cool), but I did write an article about writing, rejection and uncertainty as my contribution to dialogue around young people and creativity. The piece was published by Meanjin in this month’s issue:

Meanjin is an important literary journal and it feels great to have my first story for this publication – plus Sophie Cunningham’s editorial about feminism really nailed how I and others feel about negative reactions to women in various cultural spheres:

“I’ll just say this: either women can’t sing, paint, write or think as well as they used to—certainly not well enough to offset their tendency to become less beautiful with age—or we live in a culture that does not like the things women say or does not know how to hear them when they say it.”

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