ABSTRACT

Journalism, Gender and Power revisits the key themes explored in the 1998 edited collection News, Gender and Power. It takes stock of progress made to date, and also breaks ground in advancing critical understandings of how and why gender matters for journalism and current democratic cultures.

This new volume develops research insights into issues such as the influence of media ownership and control on sexism, women’s employment, and "macho" news cultures, the gendering of objectivity and impartiality, tensions around the professional identities of journalists, news coverage of violence against women, the sexualization of women in the news, the everyday experience of normative hierarchies and biases in newswork, and the gendering of news audience expectations, amongst other issues.

These issues prompt vital questions for feminist and gender-centred explorations concerned with reimagining journalism in the public interest. Contributors to this volume challenge familiar perspectives, and in so doing, extend current parameters of dialogue and debate in fresh directions relevant to the increasingly digitalized, interactive intersections of journalism with gender and power around the globe.

Journalism, Gender and Power will inspire readers to rethink conventional assumptions around gender in news reporting—conceptual, professional, and strategic—with an eye to forging alternative, progressive ways forward.

part I|93 pages

The gendered politics of news production

chapter 1|15 pages

Getting to the top

Women and decision-making in European news media industries

chapter 2|15 pages

Women and technology in the newsroom

Vision or reality from data journalism to the news startup era

chapter 3|16 pages

When Arab women (and men) speak

Struggles of women journalists in a gendered news industry

chapter 5|17 pages

Pretty in pink

The ongoing importance of appearance in broadcast news

part II|108 pages

News discourses, sexualization, and sexual violence

chapter 7|16 pages

Trending now

Feminism, postfeminism, sexism, and misogyny in British journalism

chapter 8|15 pages

US news coverage of transgender lives

A historical and critical review

chapter 11|15 pages

Patriarchy and power in the South African news

Competing coverage of the murder of Anene Booysen 1

chapter 13|14 pages

Page 3 journalism

Gender and news cultures in post-reforms India

part III|92 pages

Engendering news audiences and activism

chapter 14|16 pages

Refugees and Islam

Representing race, rights, and cohabitation

chapter 16|15 pages

be cute, play with dolls, and stick to tea parties

Journalism, girls, and power

chapter 17|14 pages

Mediated, gendered activism in the “post-Arab Spring” era

Lessons from Tunisia’s “Jasmine revolution”

part IV|88 pages

Politics and identities in the news

chapter 21|19 pages

Women and war photography

En/gendering alternative histories

chapter 23|16 pages

When women run for office

Press coverage of Hillary Clinton during the 2016 presidential campaign