References and Further Reading

Corneliussen, H. (2004). “‘I Don’t Understand Computer Programming, Because I’m a Woman!’ Negotiating Gendered Positions in a Norwegian Discourse of Computing,” in K. Morgan, C. A. Brebbia, J. Sanchez and A. Voiskounsky (eds), Human Perspectives in the Internet Society: Culture, Psychology and Gender (Southampton: WIT Press), pp. 173–82.

Fallows, D. (2005). “How Women and Men Use the Internet,” http://www.pewinternet.org/PPF/r/171/report_display.asp, 28 December 2005.

Faulkner, W. (2001). “The Technology Question in Feminism: A View from Feminist Technology Studies,” Women’s Studies International Forum, 24 (1): 79–95.

Gill, R. and Grint, K. (1995). “The Gender–Technology Relation: An Introduction,” in K. Grint and R. Gill (eds), The Gender–Technology Relation: Contemporary Theory and Research (London: Taylor & Francis), pp. 1–28.

Henwood, F. (1998). “Engineering Difference: Discourses on Gender, Sexuality and Work in a College of Technology,” Gender and Education, 10 (1): 35–49.

Henwood, F., Wyatt, S., Miller, N. and Senker, P. (2000). “Critical Perspectives on Technologies, in/Equalities and the Information Society,” in S. Wyatt, F. Henwood, N. Miller and P. Senker (eds), Technology and in/Equality: Questioning the Information Society (London: Routledge), pp. 1–18.

Herring, S. C. (2000). “Gender Differences in Cmc: Findings and Implications,” The CPRS Newsletter, 18 (1).

Hofmann, J. (1999). “Writer, Texts and Writing Acts: Gendered User Images in ...

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