University of Calgary

Publications - 2019


 

A Tale of Three Platforms: Collaboration, Contestation, and Degrees of Audibility in a Bulgarian e-Municipality

Bakardjieva, Maria
 

Communication research and teaching in Canada

Taylor, Gregory and Ray Op'tLand
 

Digital Feminist Activism: Girls and Women Fight Back Against Rape Culture

Keller, Jessalynn, Mendes, Kaitlynn and Ringrose, Jessica

In recent years, feminists have turned to digital technologies and social media platforms to dialogue, network, and organize against contemporary sexism, misogyny, and rape culture. The emergence of feminist campaigns such as #MeToo, #BeenRapedNeverReported, and Everyday Sexism are part of a growing trend of digital resistances and challenges to sexism, patriarchy, and other forms of oppression. Although recent scholarship has documented the ways digital spaces are often highly creative sites where the public can learn about and intervene in rape culture, little research has explored girls’ and women’s experiences of using digital platforms to challenge misogynistic practices. This is therefore the first book-length study to interrogate how girls and women negotiate rape culture through digital platforms, including blogs, Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, and mobile apps. Through an analysis of high-profile campaigns such as Hollaback!, Everyday Sexism, and the everyday activism of Twitter feminists, this book presents findings of over 800 pieces of digital content, and semi-structured interviews with 82 girls, women, and some men around the world, including organizers of various feminist campaigns and those who have contributed to them. As our study shows, digital feminist activism is far more complex and nuanced than one might initially expect, and a variety of digital platforms are used in a multitude of ways, for many purposes. Furthermore, although it may be technologically easy for many groups to engage in digital feminist activism, there remain emotional, mental, or practical barriers that create different experiences, and legitimate some feminist voices, perspectives, and experiences over others.

 

Digital literacy in digital strategy

Shepherd, Tamara and Henderson, Monica
 

Digitized narratives of sexual violence: Making sexual violence felt and known through digital disclosures

Keller, Jessalynn, Mendes, Kaitlynn and Ringrose, Jessica
 

Figure and Force in Animation Aesthetics

Pierson, Ryan
 

How to stay connected in an 'offline' country? Stories of Cubans' Internet experience

Reloba de la Cruz, Xenia
 

In the Wake of Militant Cinema: Challenges for Film Studies

Croombs, Matthew
 

Making email more efficient means answering more emails even faster

Chokshi, Crystal
 

Net Neutrality regulation and the Participatory Condition

Shepherd, Tamara
 

'Oh, She’s a Tumblr Feminist': Exploring the Platform Vernacular of Girls’ Social Media Feminisms

Keller, Jessalynn
Image of Professional and technical communication: Analyzing website rhetoric and usability, 2nd ed.

Professional and technical communication: Analyzing website rhetoric and usability, 2nd ed.

Smith, Tania

Professional & Technical Communication: Analyzing Website Rhetoric and Usability provides advice, guidelines, and theoretical foundations for university or college students who are analyzing organizational websites for their rhetoric and their usability. The book is intended to supplement other commonly assigned textbooks and online readings for a postsecondary course in professional and technical communication.

 

Rape-related mourning on a social network site: Leah Parsons’ ‘Facebooked’ grief and the Angel Rehtaeh Parsons Page

Little, Nicolette
 

Rikke Schubart, Mastering Fear: Women, Emotions, and Contemporary Horror

Evernden, Christopher
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