@article{4f36107e1310404d956d1f460b0c729f,
title = "Exploring digital fiction as a tool for teenage body image bibliotherapy",
abstract = "This article reflects on the findings of the interdisciplinary {\textquoteleft}TransForm{\textquoteright} project,which ran between 2012 and 2014 and aimed to explore how reading andwriting digital fictions (DFs) might support young women in developingframeworks for more positive thinking regarding their body image. Theproject comprised the following stages: (1) a review and compilation of DFsthematising and/or problematising female corporeality; (2) a series ofcooperative inquiries with 3 groups of young women (aged 16–19 years)over a period of 5 weeks, examining participants{\textquoteright} responses to a selection ofthe previously compiled DFs, as well as the challenges these young womenface in relation to body image and (3) an interventionist summer school inwhich participants aged 16–19 explored body image issues via writing DFs.This article reports on the main observations and findings of each stage, anddraws conclusions for future research needs in this area.",
keywords = "Digital fiction, cooperative inquiry, expressive writing, bibliotherapy, body image",
author = "Astrid Ensslin and Rebecca Skains and Sarah Riley and Joan Haran and Alison Mackiewicz and Emma Halliwell",
note = "2016 Taylor \& Francis. This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor \& Francis via the DOI in this record.",
year = "2016",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1080/14626268.2016.1210646",
language = "English",
volume = "27",
pages = "177--195",
journal = "Digital Creativity",
issn = "1462-6268",
publisher = "Taylor \& Francis",
number = "3",
}