ABSTRACT

The Routledge Companion to Media and Gender offers a comprehensive examination of media and gender studies, charting its histories, investigating ongoing controversies, and assessing future trends.

The 59 chapters in this volume, written by leading researchers from around the world, provide scholars and students with an engaging and authoritative survey of current thinking in media and gender research.

The Companion includes the following features:

  • With each chapter addressing a distinct, concrete set of issues, the volume includes research from around the world to engage readers in a broad array of global and transnational issues and intersectional perspectives.
  • Authors address a series of important questions that have consequences for current and future thinking in the field, including postfeminism, sexual violence, masculinity, media industries, queer identities, video games, digital policy, media activism, sexualization, docusoaps, teen drama, cosmetic surgery, media Islamophobia, sport, telenovelas, news audiences, pornography, and social and mobile media.
  • A range of academic disciplines inform exploration of key issues around production and policymaking, representation, audience engagement, and the place of gender in media studies.

The Routledge Companion to Media and Gender is an essential guide to the central ideas, concepts and debates currently shaping media and gender research.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

Re-imagining media and gender

part |154 pages

Media Industries, Labor, and Policy

chapter |11 pages

Women and media control

Feminist interrogations at the macro-level

chapter |10 pages

Putting gender in the mix

Employment, participation, and role expectations in the music industries

chapter |10 pages

Shifting boundaries

Gender, labor, and new information and communication technology

chapter |11 pages

Boys are … girls are …

How children's media and merchandizing construct gender

chapter |10 pages

Holy grail or poisoned chalice?

Three generations of men's magazines

chapter |11 pages

Making public policy in the digital age

The sex industry as a political actor

chapter |11 pages

Gender and digital policy

From global information infrastructure to internet governance

chapter |12 pages

Gender and media activism

Alternative feminist media in Europe 1

chapter |12 pages

Between legitimacy and political efficacy

Feminist counter-publics and the internet in China

part |149 pages

Images and Representations Across Texts and Genres

chapter |10 pages

Buying and selling sex

Sexualization, commerce, and gender

chapter |11 pages

Class, gender, and the docusoap

The Only Way Is Essex

chapter |10 pages

Society's emerging femininities

Neoliberal, postfeminist, and hybrid identities on television in South Africa

chapter |10 pages

A nice bit of skirt and talking head

Sex, politics, and news

chapter |11 pages

Transgender, transmedia, transnationality

Chaz Bono in documentary and Dancing with the Stars

chapter |11 pages

“Shameless mums” and universal pedophiles

Sexualization and commodification of children

chapter |10 pages

Glances, dances, romances

An overview of gendered sexual narratives in teen drama series

chapter |10 pages

Smoothing the wrinkles

Hollywood, “successful aging,” and the new visibility of older female stars

chapter |11 pages

Perfect bodies, imperfect messages

Media coverage of cosmetic surgery and ideal beauty

chapter |10 pages

Narrative pleasure in Homeland

The competing femininities of “rogue agents” and “terror wives”

chapter |11 pages

Above the fold and beyond the veil

Islamophobia in Western media

part |169 pages

Media Audiences, Users, and Prosumers

chapter |10 pages

Subjects of capacity?

Reality TV and young women

chapter |10 pages

Looking beyond representation

Situating the significance of gender portrayal within game play

chapter |11 pages

Textual orientation

Queer female fandom online

chapter |12 pages

Delivering the male—and more

Fandom and media sport

chapter |10 pages

Gender and social media

Sexism, empowerment, or the irrelevance of gender?

chapter |10 pages

Slippery subjects

Gender, meaning, and the Bollywood audience

chapter |10 pages

Reading girlhood

Opportunities for social literacy

chapter |11 pages

Feminism in a postfeminist world

Women discuss who's “hot”—and why we care—on the collegiate “Anonymous Confession Board”

chapter |11 pages

Gendered networked visualities

Locative camera phone cultures in Seoul, South Korea

chapter |11 pages

Gendering the Arab Spring

Arab women journalists/activists, “cyberfeminism,” and the sociopolitical revolution

part |77 pages

Gendered Media Futures and the Future of Gender

chapter |10 pages

Latinas on television and film

Exploring the limits and possibilities of inclusion

chapter |10 pages

Policing the crisis of masculinity

Media and masculinity at the dawn of the new century

chapter |11 pages

Intersectionality, digital identities, and migrant youths

Moroccan Dutch youths as digital space invaders

chapter |11 pages

Online popular anti-sexism political action in the UK and USA

The importance of collaborative anger for social change