Child Influencers: How children have become entangled with social media commerce
1. Abidin, Crystal. 2016. “Please subscribe! Influencers, social media, and the commodification of everyday life.” PhD Thesis (Anthropology & Sociology, Communication & Media Studies), University of Western Australia.2. Abidin,. Bingley, UK: Emerald Publishing.3. Abidin, Crystal. 2018. “What is an internet celebrity any way?” , 13 September 2018.4. Abidin, Crystal. 2016. “Visibility labour: Engaging with Influencers’ fashion brands and #OOTD advertorial campaigns on Instagram.” 161(1): 86-100.5. Abidin, Crystal. 2011. “: Cyber-femininities, Homosocial Desire & Power.” Honours Thesis (Sociology & Gender Studies), National University of Singapore.6. Abidin, Crystal, and Eric C. Thompson. 2012. “: Cyberfemininities and Commercial Intimacy in Blogshops.” 35(6): 467-477.7. Abidin, Crystal. 2011. “New’s kid on the blog.” , 9 January 2011.8. Abidin, Crystal. 2011. “When mummy is buddy too.” , 30 January 2011.9. Abidin, Crystal. 2015. “Micro-microcelebrity: Branding babies on the Internet.” 18(5).10. Abidin, Crystal. 2020. “Preschool stars on YouTube: Child microcelebrities, Commercially viable biographies, and Interactions with technology.” Pp. 226-234 in , edited by Lelia Green, Donell Holloway, Leslie Haddon, Kylie Stevenson, and Tama Leaver. London and New York: Routledge.11. Abidin, Crystal. 2017. “#familygoals: Family Influencers, Calibrated Amateurism, and Justifying Young Digital Labour.” 3(2): 1-15.12. Abidin, Crystal. (forthcoming, 2023). . Emerald Publishing.13. Leaver, Tama, Tim Highfield, and Crystal Abidin. 2020. Cambridge: Polity Press.14. Leaver, Tama, and Crystal Abidin. 2017. “When exploiting kids for cash goes wrong on YouTube: the lessons of DaddyOFive.” , 2 May 2017.15. Abidin, Crystal. 2015. “Micro-microcelebrity: Branding babies on the Internet.” 18(5).16. Abidin, Crystal. (forthcoming, 2023). “The lattice of the child influencer industry.” [Outlet embargoed until Online First release]