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  • Zizi Papacharissi, The self online: The utility of personal home pages. "Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media" 2002 nr 3. [1]
  • Zizi Papacharissi, The Presentation of Self in Virtual Life: Characteristics of Personal Home Pages, Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, Vol. 79, No. 3. Autumn 2002. [2]
  • N. Doring, Personal Home Pages on the Web: A Review of Research, "Journal of computer mediated communication" 2002, Vol 7, Issue 3.
  • Joseph R. Dominick, Who Do You Think You Are? Personal Home Pages and Self-Representation on the World Wide Web, "Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly" 1999, Vol. 76, No. 4.

Personal web pages have been compared to many things: Rubio likened them to an open house where the owner is never present. Erickson compared them to informal resumes that also contain personal information. Chandler called them "self-advertisements." Burns said they're the business cards of the twenty-first century while Plotnikoff likened them to electronic refrigerator doors Other comparisons have not been so kind. As one critic, paraphrasing Sartre, put it, "Hell is other people's home pages. (Dominick, 1999, za: http://www.questia.com/library/journal/1P3-52340778/who-do-you-think-you-are-personal-home-pages-and)

Prior to personal web pages, only the privileged-celebrities, politicians, media magnates, advertisers-had access to the mass audience. Now anybody in the audience with the right hardware and minimal computer skills can become a mass communicator. Unlike other forms of personal expression, the contents of a web page are automatically published on the Internet, giving people the opportunity to express themselves in front of a potentially huge audience who would not otherwise know of their existence. In short, personal web pages offer us an unprecedented chance to study the audience as producers of media content rather than as consumer, the way the audience has been traditionally studied. (Dominick, 1999, za: http://www.questia.com/library/journal/1P3-52340778/who-do-you-think-you-are-personal-home-pages-and)

  • Paweł Mazurek, Internet a tożsamość, w: Społeczna przestrzeń internetu, red. D. Batorski, M. Marody, A. Nowak, Warszawa 2006.
  • Daniel Chandler, Personal Home Pages and the Construction of Identities on the Web [3]