Hashtag Feminisms  Paid

Australian Media Feminists, Activism, and Digital Campaigns

by Sarah Casey (Author), Juliet Watson (Author)
©2023, Monographs, X, 270 Pages
Media & Communication

Series: Australian Studies: Interdisciplinary Perspectives, Volume 6

HARDCOVER

eBook


«This fantastic book investigates the proliferation, power and changing nature of online feminist activism. The book critically focuses on the challenges and risks of online feminist activism, as well as the capacity of activist campaigns to achieve real, transformative change. Casey and Watson argue that although feminists should harness the power of hashtag and celebrity feminism, there are tensions, inequalities and power imbalances within feminism which must be navigated.

This book is a must-read, especially for activists, academics, victim-survivors and policymakers. It makes an important contribution to contemporary debates about the role of feminist digital activism across three key areas: raising public awareness of gender-based violence, contributing to cultural change, including changing norms, attitudes and behaviours, and shaping understandings of how gender, race, sexuality and other markers of difference intersect to shape experience. The book is a timely reminder that feminist activism is an important piece of the puzzle to preventing gender-based violence.»
(Professor Nicola Henry, RMIT University)

«Hashtag Feminisms is powerful. It is potent. It is engaging. This book offers momentum and transformation. It provides a pathway to our future, through courage, reflection, kindness and compassion.»
(Professor Tara Brabazon, Professor of Cultural Studies (Flinders University) / Professor of Higher Education (Massey University))

Broad-scale feminist consciousness continues to gain ground globally, as witnessed by the Women’s March, #MeToo, and #EnoughIsEnough in Australia. Aided by hashtag activism and media feminists, feminist campaigns have highlighted the need for change in cultural attitudes to issues such as gender-based violence. This book focuses on feminist campaigning in the Australian context over the last decade, contending the increased velocity of feminist discourse in the Australian mediascape represents a critical opportunity for larger scale, feminist-led mass awareness campaigns. The authors ask: what is it about hashtag activism and celebrity feminisms that may be most useful to (some) Australian feminists, and what are the challenges and potential risks of these forms of activism? Does such activism have substantive political or material effects? Or is this type of activism just echo chamber activism, which does little to address structural inequalities and, if so, might anything be salvaged?

Cover
HalfTitle
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction: A Groundswell of Feminist Activism
Activism and campaigning
Campaign tools and tactics
Chapter overviews
Part I: Australian feminist online activism
Part II Popular media feminisms and feminists in campaigning
Closing words
Part I Australian Feminist Online Activism
Chapter 1 Feminisms, Gender-Based Violence, and Activism
‘Defining’ feminisms and women
Neoliberalism and postfeminism
Intersectionality
Why gender-based violence and cultural attitudinal change activism?
Activism and campaigning
Recent feminist turning points around gender-based violence activism
Chapter 2 #Hysteria: Activism and the Online World
Social media activism
Facebook
Twitter
Social media and the public sphere
The digital ‘divide’
Algorithms and filter bubbles
The real, the virtual
Feminist online activism
Chapter 3 A Case Study of Feminist Activist Interventions in Queensland Party Politics: #SackGavin
Case study: What Gavin did
The campaign
Campaign methods, events, and actions
Online petition and Change.org
‘Disendorse candidate who blames women when they’re raped’
Punks, drunks, and desperadoes: An online T-shirt and tote shop
Calling in support
‘Dear Gavin’ letter on website
The Facebook bombing
White Ribbon Day and the Queensland Leaders’ Debate
Queensland Women’s Legal Service
Stand by your man: King’s wife speaks
What Gavin did next
#SackGavin campaign achievements
Lessons from #SackGavin
Multi-pronged overlapping activist strategies
Part II Popular Media Feminisms and Feminists in Campaigning
Chapter 4 Media Feminists: Bytesizes and Branding
Celebrity feminism
Feminist media culture
Authority
Increased velocity
The unpalatable–palatable
Palatable packages and the risk of depoliticisation
Chapter 5 Unpalatable–Palatable Tensions
The unpalatable–palatable conceptual framework
The palatable
Dannielle Miller
Mia Freedman and Mamamia
Tara Moss
Melinda Tankard Reist
#MTRsues
The unpalatable
Helen Razer
Catherine Deveny
Clementine Ford
Emergent feminist voices
Are media feminists beneficial for mass-awareness campaigning?
Is the popular worth it?
Conclusion: Feminist Solidarity and Consciousness-Raising
The feminist cultural and political turn
Online activism
Celebrity feminists
The unpalatable–palatable
Campaigning
A collective, evolving project
Bibliography
Pages:
X, 270
Year:
2023
ISBN (HARDBACK):
9781906165758 (Active)
ISBN (EPUB):
9781787070929 (Active)
ISBN (PDF):
9781787070912 (Active)
Language:
English
Published:
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, New York, Wien, 2023. X, 270 pp.

Dr Sarah Casey is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Business and Creative Industries at the University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia. Her research centres on advocacy, and media and communication campaigning, with a particular interest in rural, regional, and remote women. She is a long-term executive member of the Australian Women’s and Gender Studies Association.

Dr Juliet Watson is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Global, Urban and Social Studies at RMIT University, Australia. Her research interests include homelessness, gender-based violence, and feminisms. She was previously President of the Australian Women’s and Gender Studies Association.

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