Scholarly Articles & Book Chapters
Wiest, Julie B., Laura Robinson, and Katia Moles. 2024 (in press). “The Influence of New Media Technologies on Contemporary Interpretive Research.” Pp. (TBD) in Handbook of Interpretive Research Methods in the Social Sciences, edited by M. Kusenbach and M. Pfadenhauer. Elgar Publishing.
Levin, Jack and Julie B. Wiest. 2024 (in press). “Serial Murder.” Pp. (TBD) in Handbook on Violent Crime and Society, edited by W. Rogoeczi and T. Miethe. Elgar Publishing.
Chiaraluce, Cara, Katia Moles, Laura Robinson, and Julie B. Wiest. 2022 (OnlineFirst). “A Social Diagnosis of Digitally Mediated COVID-19 Trauma.” American Behavioral Scientist. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/00027642221132185
Wiest, Julie B. 2021. “Sociology of Mass and New Media through an Interactionist Lens.” Pp. 275-295 in The Oxford Handbook of Symbolic Interaction, edited by W. Brekhus, T. DeGloma, and W. Force. New York: Oxford University Press. [published online August 2021]
Robinson, Laura, Jeremy Schulz, Hopeton S. Dunn, Wenhong Chen, Antonio A. Casilli, Paola Tubaro, Barry Wellman, Molly-Gloria Harper, Michael J. Stern, Matías Dodel, Julie B. Wiest, Christopher Ball, Tim Huang, Aneka Khilnani, Grant Blank, Massimo Ragnedda, Hiroshi Ono, Bernie Hogan, Gustavo Mesch, Shelia Cotten, Susan B. Kretchmer, Timothy M. Hale, Tomasz Drabowicz, Pu Yan, and Anabel Quan-Haase. 2020. “Digital Inequalities 3.0: Emergent Inequalities in the Information Age.” First Monday, 25(7).
Robinson, Laura, Jeremy Schulz, Grant Blank, Massimo Ragnedda, Hiroshi Ono, Bernie Hogan, Gustavo Mesch, Shelia Cotten, Susan B. Kretchmer, Timothy M. Hale, Tomasz Drabowicz, Pu Yan, Anabel Quan-Haase, Hopeton S. Dunn, Wenhong Chen, Antonio A. Casilli, Paola Tubaro, Barry Wellman, Molly-Gloria Harper, Michael J. Stern, Matías Dodel, Julie B. Wiest, Christopher Ball, Tim Huang, and Aneka Khilnani. 2020. “Digital Inequalities 2.0: Legacy Inequalities in the Information Age.” First Monday, 25(7).
Wiest, Julie B. and Jack Levin. 2019. “Effects of Gender and Age on U.S. Adults’ Interest in Cinematic Serial Murder.” Violence and Gender, 6(3): 168-174.
Levin, Jack and Julie B. Wiest. 2018. "Covering Mass Murder: An Experimental Examination of the Effect of News Focus-Killer, Victim, or Hero-on Reader Interest." American Behavioral Scientist, 62(2): 181-194.
Wiest, Julie B. 2016. “Entertaining Genius: U.S. Media Representations of Exceptional Intelligence.” MediaTropes, 6(2): 148-170.
Wiest, Julie B. 2016. “Casting Cultural Monsters: Representations of Serial Killers in U.S. and U.K. News Media.” Howard Journal of Communications, 27(4): 327-346.
Wiest, Julie B. 2016. “The Role of Mass Media in the Transmission of Culture.” Pp. 203-219 in Communication and Information Technologies Annual (Studies in Media and Communications, Volume 11), edited by L. Robinson, J. Schulz, S. Cotten, T.M. Hale, A.A. Williams, and J.L. Hightower. Bingley, Bradford, UK: Emerald Group Publishing.
Wiest, Julie B. and Nahed Eltantawy. 2015. “Mediatization in the Arab World: A Cross-Cultural Comparison of New Media Use.” Online Journal of Communication and Media Technologies 5(2): 120-142.
Wiest, Julie B. 2013. “My Wartime Self: Meaning Construction in Narratives of World War II.” Narrative Works: Issues, Investigations, & Interventions 3(1): 68-97.
Wiest, Julie B. and Mary Duffy. 2013. “The Impact of Gender Roles on Verdicts and Sentences in Cases of Filicide.” Criminal Justice Studies 26(3): 347-365.
Wiest, Julie B. and Nahed Eltantawy. 2012. “Social Media Use among UAE College Students One Year after the Arab Spring.” Journal of Arab & Muslim Media Research 5(3): 209-226.
Eltantawy, Nahed and Julie B. Wiest. 2011. “Social Media in the Egyptian Revolution: Reconsidering Resource Mobilization Theory.” International Journal of Communication 5: 1207-1224.
Wiest, Julie B. 2007. “Whose Music Is It? The Battle Between Copyright and Right to Copy.” Journal of Information Technology Impact 7(2): 91-110.
Wiest, Julie B., Laura Robinson, and Katia Moles. 2024 (in press). “The Influence of New Media Technologies on Contemporary Interpretive Research.” Pp. (TBD) in Handbook of Interpretive Research Methods in the Social Sciences, edited by M. Kusenbach and M. Pfadenhauer. Elgar Publishing.
Levin, Jack and Julie B. Wiest. 2024 (in press). “Serial Murder.” Pp. (TBD) in Handbook on Violent Crime and Society, edited by W. Rogoeczi and T. Miethe. Elgar Publishing.
Chiaraluce, Cara, Katia Moles, Laura Robinson, and Julie B. Wiest. 2022 (OnlineFirst). “A Social Diagnosis of Digitally Mediated COVID-19 Trauma.” American Behavioral Scientist. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/00027642221132185
Wiest, Julie B. 2021. “Sociology of Mass and New Media through an Interactionist Lens.” Pp. 275-295 in The Oxford Handbook of Symbolic Interaction, edited by W. Brekhus, T. DeGloma, and W. Force. New York: Oxford University Press. [published online August 2021]
Robinson, Laura, Jeremy Schulz, Hopeton S. Dunn, Wenhong Chen, Antonio A. Casilli, Paola Tubaro, Barry Wellman, Molly-Gloria Harper, Michael J. Stern, Matías Dodel, Julie B. Wiest, Christopher Ball, Tim Huang, Aneka Khilnani, Grant Blank, Massimo Ragnedda, Hiroshi Ono, Bernie Hogan, Gustavo Mesch, Shelia Cotten, Susan B. Kretchmer, Timothy M. Hale, Tomasz Drabowicz, Pu Yan, and Anabel Quan-Haase. 2020. “Digital Inequalities 3.0: Emergent Inequalities in the Information Age.” First Monday, 25(7).
Robinson, Laura, Jeremy Schulz, Grant Blank, Massimo Ragnedda, Hiroshi Ono, Bernie Hogan, Gustavo Mesch, Shelia Cotten, Susan B. Kretchmer, Timothy M. Hale, Tomasz Drabowicz, Pu Yan, Anabel Quan-Haase, Hopeton S. Dunn, Wenhong Chen, Antonio A. Casilli, Paola Tubaro, Barry Wellman, Molly-Gloria Harper, Michael J. Stern, Matías Dodel, Julie B. Wiest, Christopher Ball, Tim Huang, and Aneka Khilnani. 2020. “Digital Inequalities 2.0: Legacy Inequalities in the Information Age.” First Monday, 25(7).
Wiest, Julie B. and Jack Levin. 2019. “Effects of Gender and Age on U.S. Adults’ Interest in Cinematic Serial Murder.” Violence and Gender, 6(3): 168-174.
Levin, Jack and Julie B. Wiest. 2018. "Covering Mass Murder: An Experimental Examination of the Effect of News Focus-Killer, Victim, or Hero-on Reader Interest." American Behavioral Scientist, 62(2): 181-194.
Wiest, Julie B. 2016. “Entertaining Genius: U.S. Media Representations of Exceptional Intelligence.” MediaTropes, 6(2): 148-170.
Wiest, Julie B. 2016. “Casting Cultural Monsters: Representations of Serial Killers in U.S. and U.K. News Media.” Howard Journal of Communications, 27(4): 327-346.
Wiest, Julie B. 2016. “The Role of Mass Media in the Transmission of Culture.” Pp. 203-219 in Communication and Information Technologies Annual (Studies in Media and Communications, Volume 11), edited by L. Robinson, J. Schulz, S. Cotten, T.M. Hale, A.A. Williams, and J.L. Hightower. Bingley, Bradford, UK: Emerald Group Publishing.
Wiest, Julie B. and Nahed Eltantawy. 2015. “Mediatization in the Arab World: A Cross-Cultural Comparison of New Media Use.” Online Journal of Communication and Media Technologies 5(2): 120-142.
Wiest, Julie B. 2013. “My Wartime Self: Meaning Construction in Narratives of World War II.” Narrative Works: Issues, Investigations, & Interventions 3(1): 68-97.
Wiest, Julie B. and Mary Duffy. 2013. “The Impact of Gender Roles on Verdicts and Sentences in Cases of Filicide.” Criminal Justice Studies 26(3): 347-365.
Wiest, Julie B. and Nahed Eltantawy. 2012. “Social Media Use among UAE College Students One Year after the Arab Spring.” Journal of Arab & Muslim Media Research 5(3): 209-226.
Eltantawy, Nahed and Julie B. Wiest. 2011. “Social Media in the Egyptian Revolution: Reconsidering Resource Mobilization Theory.” International Journal of Communication 5: 1207-1224.
Wiest, Julie B. 2007. “Whose Music Is It? The Battle Between Copyright and Right to Copy.” Journal of Information Technology Impact 7(2): 91-110.