Michele White is an Assistant Professor in the
Department of Communication at Tulane University. She
teaches Internet and new media studies, television and
film theory, art history and contemporary visual culture,
science fiction and technology literature, gender and
queer theory, and critical race and postcolonial studies.

Her book, which is entitled
The Body and the Screen:
Theories of Internet Spectatorship
, was published
by MIT Press in 2006.  It considers how spectatorial
positions are produced and structured by Internet
settings. Internet sites and computer interfaces address
the spectator, depict the kinds of bodies that are
expected to engage, model the views and experiences
that can be accessed, and promise spectatorial control
for some individuals. In
The Body and the Screen, White
poses hybrid critical models and suggests how theories
of art viewing, authorship, feminist and psychoanalytic
film, gender and queer studies, hypertext, photographic
reproductions, television, and postcolonial and critical
race studies offer ways to understand Internet sites and
spectatorship. The critical models indicated in this book
are intended to support ongoing new media research and
production strategies. More information about
The Body
and the Screen
and a sample chapter are available at the
MIT web site.

Her recent articles include: "Where Do You Want to
Sit Today? Computer Programmers' Static Bodies and
Disability"
Information, Communication and Society 9,
3 (2006); "Television and Internet Differences by Design:
Rendering Liveness, Presence, and Lived Space,"

Convergence: The International Journal of Research into
New Media Technologies
12, 3 (August 2006); "My Queer
eBay: 'Gay Interest' Photographs and the Visual Culture
of Buying," in
Everyday eBay: Culture, Collecting, and
Desire
, ed. Ken Hillis, Michael Petit, and Nathan Scott
Epley. New York: Routledge Press, 2006; "Too Close to
See: Men, Women, and Webcams,"
New Media & Society
5, 1 (2003); "The Aesthetic of Failure: Net Art Gone
Wrong,"
Angelaki: Journal of Theoretical Humanities 7,
1 (2002); "Representations or People,"
Ethics and
Information Technology 4, 3 (2002); "Where Is the
Louvre,"
Space and Culture - The Journal 4/5 (2000);
and "Visual Pleasure in Textual Places: Gazing in
Multi-User Object-Oriented Worlds,"
Information,
Communication, and Society 2 (1999).

White's current research includes two book projects:
Buy
It Now: Lessons from eBay
and Elements of the
Internet: Rethinking the Network and Information
Technology Workers
. Buy It Now indicates how buyers,
sellers, categories, collecting processes, and material
objects are articulated through eBay's carefully
structured narratives and representations. Chapters
address eBay's histories, the interface and production of
viewing positions, construction of community, sellers'
narratives about digital representations and relinquishing
desirable things, the rendering of alternative eBay
viewing positions, the reproduction of stereotypes,
artists' interventions into the site, and how critical
considerations of eBay can be used to interrogate other
Internet conventions. The book points to what makes
eBay important, proposes a series of critical readings of
the site, and suggests how an analysis of eBay's
structure can be used to explain other Internet sites and
interfaces.

Elements of the Internet considers some of the standard
ways academics, artists, popular writers, and other
individuals represent Internet engagements. It considers
how the Internet is rendered through visual and textual
representations of entering, going, aliveness and
liveness, and space. The tendency to describe these
concepts as inherent, necessary, and original is critiqued
by comparing them to counter-narratives about the
Internet and the similar conventions employed in such
cultural forms as architecture and television. The use of
spatial terms in conceptualizing the Internet is also
resisted with a strategic vocabulary, which includes such
concepts as reading, typing, sitting, and representations.
These alternative terms emphasize the rendered aspects
of Internet and computer engagements and indicate how
technologies and depictions influence individuals'
embodied experiences. In proposing different models
for understanding the Internet, the book also indicates
the alternative functionality and strategic resources that
the Internet can offer.

Additional
contact information, a curriculum vita, and an
Internet and new media studies bibliography are available
on this site.
Michele White
mwhite [at]
michelewhite [dot] org