1.

Record Nr.

UNISALENTO991003665519707536

Autore

Hoffmann, Christine Gabriele

Titolo

Heinrich Böll / Christine Gabriele Hoffmann

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Hamburg : Dressler, 1977

ISBN

3791550039

Descrizione fisica

165 p. : ill. ; 19 cm

Collana

Dressler : Menschen

Disciplina

833.914

Soggetti

Böll, Heinrich Biografia

Böll, Heinrich Biografia

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Molteplice

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia



2.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910484026603321

Titolo

Gender Hate Online : Understanding the New Anti-Feminism / / edited by Debbie Ging, Eugenia Siapera

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Palgrave Macmillan, , 2019

ISBN

9783319962269

3319962264

Edizione

[1st ed. 2019.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (xxiv, 281 pages) : color illustrations

Collana

Gale eBooks

Disciplina

345.0256

Soggetti

Sex

Technology - Sociological aspects

Digital media

Social media

Communication

Gender Studies

Science, Technology and Society

Digital and New Media

Social Media

Media and Communication

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

1. Introduction (Debbie Ging and Eugenia Siapera) -- Part I. Theorising the New Anti-Feminism(s) -- 2. Online Misogyny as Witch Hunt: Primitive Accumulation in the Age of Technocapitalism (Eugenia Siapera) -- 3. Bros v. Hos: Postfeminism, Anti-Feminism and the Toxic Turn in Digital Gender Politics (Debbie Ging) -- 4. Mera Internet, Meri Marzi: Alternative Imaginings of Consent in Pakistani Online Spaces (Nighat Dad and Shmyla Khan) -- Part II. Manifestations of Online Misogyny: Case studies of different platforms and cultural contexts -- 5. Convergence on Common Ground: MRAs, Memes and Transcultural Contexts of Digital Misogyny (MacKenzie Cockerill) -- 6. Black or Feminist: The Intersections of Misogyny, Race and Anti-Feminist Rhetoric Pertaining to the Bill Cosby Allegations (Sarah Anne Dunne) --



7. Cruel Intentions and Social Conventions: Locating the Shame in Revenge Porn (Rikke Amundsen) -- 8. “Hell Hath No Fury….”: Gendered Reactions to the Cosby Mistrial Across Liberal and Conservative News Media Sites (Francine Banner) -- Part III. Responses/resistance/experiences -- 9. Animating Feminist Anger: Economies of Race and Gender in Reaction GIFs (Rachel Kuo) -- 10. Politics of #LoSha: Using Naming and Shaming as a Feminist Tool on Facebook (Arpita Chakraborty) -- 11. Affective Resistance Against Online Misogyny and Homophobia on the RuNet (Tetyana Lokot) -- 12. Feminist Tinder: Young Women Talk Back to Harassment Online (Laura Brightwell) -- 13. “Should I Even Be Writing This?”: Public Narratives and Resistance to Online Harassment (Jasmine Linbarry and Bianca Batti).

Sommario/riassunto

Gender Hate Online addresses the dynamic nature of misogyny: how it travels, what technological and cultural affordances support or obstruct this and what impact reappropriated expressions of misogyny have in other cultures. It adds significantly to an emergent body of scholarship on this topic by bringing together a variety of theoretical approaches, while also including reflections on the past, present, and future of feminism and its interconnections with technologies and media. It also addresses the fact that most work on this area has been focused on the Global North, by including perspectives from Pakistan, India and Russia as well as intersectional and transcultural analyses. Finally, it addresses ways in which women fight back and reclaim online spaces, offering practical applications as well as critical analyses. This edited collection therefore addresses a substantial gap in scholarship by bringing together a body of work exclusively devoted to this topic. With perspectives from a variety of disciplines and geographic bases, the volume will be of major interest to scholars and students in the fields of gender, new media and hate speech. Debbie Ging is Associate Professor of Media Studies in the School of Communications at Dublin City University, Ireland. Eugenia Siapera is Associate Professor of Digital and Social Media and Deputy Director of the Institute for Future Media and Journalism in the School of Communications at Dublin City University, Ireland.