Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker i Feminist Media Studies-serien

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  • - Activist Rhetoric and Coalitional Possibilities
    av Karma R. Chavez
    357 - 1 189,-

    Offers activists, queer scholars, feminists, and immigration scholars productive tools for theorizing political efficacy.

  • - Hardcore Encounters with the Victorian Gothic
    av Laura Helen Marks
    266 - 1 189,-

  • - US Security Culture and the New Reproductive Regime
    av Natalie Fixmer-Oraiz
    266 - 1 189,-

  • - Race and Violence in U.S. Law and Politics
    av Sara L. McKinnon
    266 - 1 189,-

  • - Rethinking Criminalization, Privacy, and Consent
    av Amy Adele Hasinoff
    279,-

  • - An Unauthorized Feminist Account of the NFL
    av Thomas P. Oates
    266 - 1 189,-

  • - Feminized Popular Culture in the Early Twenty-First Century
     
    1 189,-

  • - Feminized Popular Culture in the Early Twenty-First Century
     
    292,-

    Media expansion into the digital realm and the continuing segregation of users into niches has led to a proliferation of cultural products targeted to and consumed by women. Though often dismissed as frivolous or excessively emotional, feminized culture in reality offers compelling insights into the American experience of the early twenty-first century. Elana Levine brings together writings from feminist critics that chart the current terrain of feminized pop cultural production. Analyzing everything from Fifty Shades of Grey to Pinterest to pregnancy apps, contributors examine the economic, technological, representational, and experiential dimensions of products and phenomena that speak to, and about, the feminine. As these essays show, the imperative of productivity currently permeating feminized pop culture has created a generation of texts that speak as much to women's roles as public and private workers as to an impulse for fantasy or escape.Incisive and compelling, Cupcakes, Pinterest, and Ladyporn sheds new light on contemporary women's engagement with an array of media forms in the context of postfeminist culture and neoliberalism.

  • - How Black Women Transformed US Pop Culture
    av Aria S. Halliday
    266 - 1 189,-

  • av Kim Hong Nguyen
    277 - 1 182,-

    "Mean girl feminism encourages girls and women to be sassy, sarcastic, and ironic as feminist performance. Yet it coopts its affect, form, and content, from racialized oppression and protest while directing meanness toward people in marginalized groups. Kim Hong Nguyen examines four types of white mean girl feminism prominent in North American popular culture: the bitch, the mean girl, the power couple, and the global mother. White feminists mime the anger, disempowerment, and resistance felt by people of color and other marginalized groups. Their performance allows them to pursue and claim a special place within established power structures, present as intellectually superior, advance their girl squads and their partners as part of a politics of solidarity and community, and position themselves as better, more enlightened masters than men. But, as Nguyen argues, the racialized meanness found across pop culture opens possibilities for building an intersectional feminist politics that rejects performative civility in favor of turning anger into liberation"--

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