ABSTRACT

Current Perspectives in Feminist Media Studies features contributions written by a diverse group of stellar feminist scholars from around the world. Each contributor has authored a brief, thought-provoking commentary on the current status and future directions of feminist media studies. Although contributors write about numerous, discrete subjects within the field of feminist media studies, their various ideas and concerns can be merged into six broad, overlapping subject areas that allow us to gain a strong sense of the expansive contours of current feminist communication scholarship and activism which the authors have identified as generally illustrative of the field. Specifically, authors encourage feminist media scholars to engage with issues of political economy, new ICTs and cybercultures as well as digital media policy, media and identity, sexuality and sexualisation, and postfeminism. They stress that feminist media scholars must broaden and deepen our theoretical frameworks and methodologies so as to provide a better sense of the conceptual complexities of feminist media studies and empirical realities of contemporary media forms, practices and audiences.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Feminist Media Studies.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter |6 pages

Arab Feminist Media Studies

Towards a poetics of diversity

chapter |8 pages

Sex, Shopping and Security

Thinking about feminist media studies again

chapter |5 pages

Bridging the Gaps

Feminist generation gaps and feminist media studies in the US context

chapter |7 pages

African Feminist Media Studies

A view from the global South

chapter |7 pages

”Roll up your Sleeves!”

Black women, black feminism in Feminist Media Studies

chapter |9 pages

The Difference Engine

Gender equality, journalism and the good society

chapter |8 pages

Body Matters

Resuscitating the corporeal in a new media environment

chapter |9 pages

Do your Homework

New media, old problems

chapter |6 pages

”Pro-Suming” Swearing (Verbal Violence)

”Affect” as feminist (Internet) criticism

chapter |6 pages

Unveiling France’s Border Strategies

Gender and the politics of the headscarf ban

chapter |7 pages

Feminism and Media in the Post-Feminist Era

What to make of the “feminist” in feminist media studies

chapter |7 pages

Arriving at a Crossroads

Political priorities for a socially relevant feminist media scholarship

chapter |7 pages

Wanted, Alive and Kicking

Curious feminist digital policy geeks

chapter |11 pages

Negotiating the Local/Global in Feminist Media Studies

Conversations with Ana Carolina Escosteguy and Anita Gurumurthy