ABSTRACT

Feminist Interventions in Participatory Media is an edited collection that brings together feminist theory and participatory media pedagogy. It asks what, if anything, is inherently feminist about participatory media? Can participatory media practices and pedagogies be used to reanimate or enact feminist futures? And finally, what reimagined feminist pedagogies are opened up (or closed down) by participatory media across various platforms, spaces, scales, and practices?

Each chapter looks at a specific example where the author(s) have used participatory media to integrate technology and feminist praxis in production and teaching. The case studies originate from sites as varied as community organizations to large scale collaborations between universities, public media, and social movements. They offer insights into the continuities and disjunctures which stem from the adoption of and adaption to participatory media technologies.

In complicating and dismantling perceptions of participatory media as inherently liberatory, Feminist Interventions in Participatory Media curbs the excesses of such claims and highlights those pedagogical methods and processes that do hold liberatory potential. This collection thus provides a roadmap toward (re)imagining feminist futures, while grounding that journey in the histories, practices, and past insights of feminism and media studies.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction. We have the tools we’ve been waiting for

Centering feminist media pedagogies in a time of uncertainty

chapter 1|10 pages

Intervening in Wikipedia

Feminist inquiries and opportunities

chapter 3|9 pages

Feminist perspectives and mobile culture(s)

Power and participation in girls’ digital video making communities

chapter 4|9 pages

Pop-Up Public

Weaving feminist participatory media into public radio

chapter 6|10 pages

Immediacy, hypermediacy, and the college campus

Using augmented reality for social critique