Review
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"danah boyd . . . is one of my favorite people to talk with about teenagers and technology. That’s not because I agree
with her all the time. . . . But danah is the best kind of sparring partner because she always tells me something I
didn’t know along the way. That holds true with her new book, which offers interviews with teenagers in communities
across the country. By filtering them through her distinct danah lens, she gleans valuable ins."―Emily Bazelon,
Slate
"Based on a decade of research and interviews with adolescents from the suburbs to the inner city, It’s Complicated is a
persuasive anti-alarmist polemic that should help ease parents’ concerns about all sorts of Internet bogeymen."―Randye
Hoder, TIME & Family
"The key point is that social behaviour is adaptive, and people in power (i.e. parents) rarely understand the coping
strategies being used by others. When adults start worrying about our children’s use of the internet, we should also ask
what we can learn from our children—and then look in the mirror at our own behaviour too. And have the courage to give
kids more freedom physically to roam in the 'real' world— alongside their travels in cyberspace."—Gillian Tett,
Financial Times
"The book took a decade to complete, and cites sociologists including Michel Foucault and Erving Goffman, but it’s the
voices of the 166 teenagers Boyd interviewed across America that make it a truly enlightening read."—Jane Mulkerrins,
The Sunday Telegraph
"It’s Complicated, a new book about teenagers and digital technology by the media scholar danah boyd, places today’s
s, iPads and laptops in the context of this perennial power struggle between adolescents and parents. In doing
so, it adds much to our understanding of a young generation of hyper-connected, hybrid consumer-producers – a cohort
whose behaviour often unites parents, educators and investors in collective bewilderment."—Gautam Malkani, The Financial
Times
"[T]here is something marvellously sensible about Boyd’s resolutely academic style. . . . Boyd’s anatomy of teenage life
is penetrating."—Jane Shilling, The Sunday Telegraph
"boyd’s new book is layered and smart . . . It’s Complicated will update your mind."—Alissa Quart, New York Times Book
Review
"Students, parents, and educators will find this a comprehensive study of how technology impacts teens’ lives and how
adults can help balance rather than vilify its inevitable use."—Publishers Weekly
"An exhaustively researched study of how teens use technology . . . and a manifesto on how parents as individuals and
society as a whole let young people down when they insist on protection and paternalism over media literacy and critical
thinking. Even readers who are not parents, or teens, may well find this one of the most interesting books of the
year."―Amy Benfer, Los Angeles Times
"A passionate, scholarly, and vividly described account of the reality of young peoples' use of networked technologies
in America today. Painstakingly researched through interviews and close study for more than a decade, boyd's book is the
most important analysis of networked culture I've yet to read."—Cory Doctorow, BoingBoing
"It’s Complicated is both a report from the front lines and a larger social analysis. . . . It probes much deeper than
just the latest fads in Twitter gossip or Snapchat goofiness . . . On one level it is designed to counter the paranoia
and anxiety that many parents still feel about their children’s engagement in social media. . . . But on another level
it is a poignant critique of contemporary civilization . . . The briefest possible summary? The kids are all right, but
society isn’t."—Andrew Leonard, Salon
"A fascinating, well-researched and (mostly) reassuring look at how today's tech-savvy teenagers are using social
media."—People
"boyd’s extensive research illuminates the oft-misunderstood world of teens today, where social media is an extension of
life. . . . Thorough information interwoven with common-sense advice from teens and the author enable readers,
particularly parents, to relax a bit regarding this new media age. . . . Comprehensive new research that illuminates why
and how social media is important to teens."—Kirkus Reviews
Winner of the 2015 Educators Book Award given by the Delta Kappa Gamma Society International
"In explaining the networked realm of teens, boyd has the ins of a sociologist, the eye of a reporter, and the
savvy of a technologist. For parents puzzled about what their kids are doing online, this is an indispensable
book."―Walter Isaacson, CEO of the Aspen Institute, author of Steve Jobs
"If you want to understand the digital worlds inhabited by today's young people, this is the book to read."―Howard
Gardner, coauthor of The App Generation
"I want to get this publication into the hands of every teacher, parent, policy maker, and journalist. Thoughtful in her
analysis and adept at skewering the most common misunderstandings and anxieties about teens' online lives, boyd is the
best possible person to write a book like this, and this book does not disappoint in any way."―Henry Jenkins, coauthor
of Spreadable Media: Creating Meaning and Value in a Networked Culture
"Astute, nuanced, provocative and hopeful, boyd does it all in this must-read treatise on teens and their digital
lives."—Stephen Balkam, Founder and CEO, Family Online Safety Institute
"danah boyd is one of the smartest people thinking about how teenagers use the Internet―a topic of enormous importance
to parents, me included. Her book is smart, sophisticated, and imbued throughout with a rare and wonderful sensitivity
to the real, lived experiences of teenagers. Read it to understand what they're doing online, and why―you'll come away
enlightened!"―Emily Bazelon, author of Sticks and Stones: Defeating the Culture of Bullying and Rediscovering the Power
of Character and Empathy
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About the Author
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danah boyd is Principal Researcher at Microsoft Research, Research Assistant Professor at New York University, and
Fellow at Harvard University’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society. She lives in New York City.
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