The essays in this collection outline how feminists employ a variety of digital practices and tools to create spaces of solidarity, archive important feminist digital culture work, and offer blueprints for future feminist action.
The essays in this collection outline how feminists employ a variety of digital practices and tools to create spaces of solidarity, archive important feminist digital culture work, and offer blueprints for future feminist action.
Shana MacDonald is associate professor in communication arts at the University of Waterloo. Brianna I. Wiens is postdoctoral fellow at the University of Waterloo. Michelle MacArthur is assistant professor in the School of Dramatic Art at the University of Windsor. Milena Radzikowska is professor in information design at Mount Royal University.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments Introduction: Feminist Takes on Networking Justice Chapter 1: A Sign of the Times: Hashtag Feminism as a Conceptual Framework, Tara L. Conley Chapter 2: Virtual Sojourners: The Duality of Visibility and Erasure for Black Women and LGBTQ People in the Digital Age, Melissa Brown Chapter 3: Chronic Fem(me)bots: Keywords for Crip Feminists, Adan Jerreat-Poole Chapter 4: Virtual Dwelling: Feminist Orientations to Digital Communities, Brianna I. Wiens Chapter 5: Native and Indigenous Women's Cyber-Defense of Lands and Peoples, Marisa Elena Duarte Chapter 6: "Being Seen for Who I Am": Counterpublic Trans Intelligibility and Queer Worldmaking on YouTube, Ace J. Eckstein Chapter 7: Online (Indian/South Asian) Digital Protest Publics Negotiating #POC, #BIPOC, and #anticaste, Radhika Gajjala, Sarah Ford, Vijeta Kumar, and Sujatha Subramanian Chapter 8: Affect Amplifiers: Feminist Activists and Digital Cartographies of Feminicide, Helena Suárez Val Chapter 9: Reproductive Justice and Activism On
Acknowledgments Introduction: Feminist Takes on Networking Justice Chapter 1: A Sign of the Times: Hashtag Feminism as a Conceptual Framework, Tara L. Conley Chapter 2: Virtual Sojourners: The Duality of Visibility and Erasure for Black Women and LGBTQ People in the Digital Age, Melissa Brown Chapter 3: Chronic Fem(me)bots: Keywords for Crip Feminists, Adan Jerreat-Poole Chapter 4: Virtual Dwelling: Feminist Orientations to Digital Communities, Brianna I. Wiens Chapter 5: Native and Indigenous Women's Cyber-Defense of Lands and Peoples, Marisa Elena Duarte Chapter 6: "Being Seen for Who I Am": Counterpublic Trans Intelligibility and Queer Worldmaking on YouTube, Ace J. Eckstein Chapter 7: Online (Indian/South Asian) Digital Protest Publics Negotiating #POC, #BIPOC, and #anticaste, Radhika Gajjala, Sarah Ford, Vijeta Kumar, and Sujatha Subramanian Chapter 8: Affect Amplifiers: Feminist Activists and Digital Cartographies of Feminicide, Helena Suárez Val Chapter 9: Reproductive Justice and Activism On
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