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This book examines contexts, practices, and activism on issues of
gender violence at the intersections of online and public spaces.
Through individual case studies, the volume considers the interplay
between the virtual worlds of online spaces including social media,
physical spaces and bodies, and the ways in which offline and
online dimensions of experience can serve as motivators for,
extensions of, or limitations to each other. Examining both
problems and potential solutions, chapters explore the impacts of,
and potential resistance to, the intersections of gender violence,
social media, and our complex lived environments across national
boundaries. Throughout the volume, close attention is paid to the
difficult issues highlighted when prior conceptions of basic
foundations such as public space, individual rights, and
professional responsibility are confronted by new examples that
further trouble the boundaries of long-held frameworks of legal,
social, professional understanding, and even our comprehension of
the "real." Each chapter grapples with a difficult reality related
to gender violence, underscores possible ways forward, and
highlights limitations, resisting easy answers to complex and
persistent questions about rights, personal integrity, and social
responsibility. Offering clear insights into a critical issue, this
book will be of interest to scholars and students in the areas of
media studies, social media, gender and women's studies, sociology
and criminology, digital humanities, and politics.
This book examines contexts, practices, and activism on issues of
gender violence at the intersections of online and public spaces.
Through individual case studies, the volume considers the interplay
between the virtual worlds of online spaces including social media,
physical spaces and bodies, and the ways in which offline and
online dimensions of experience can serve as motivators for,
extensions of, or limitations to each other. Examining both
problems and potential solutions, chapters explore the impacts of,
and potential resistance to, the intersections of gender violence,
social media, and our complex lived environments across national
boundaries. Throughout the volume, close attention is paid to the
difficult issues highlighted when prior conceptions of basic
foundations such as public space, individual rights, and
professional responsibility are confronted by new examples that
further trouble the boundaries of long-held frameworks of legal,
social, professional understanding, and even our comprehension of
the "real." Each chapter grapples with a difficult reality related
to gender violence, underscores possible ways forward, and
highlights limitations, resisting easy answers to complex and
persistent questions about rights, personal integrity, and social
responsibility. Offering clear insights into a critical issue, this
book will be of interest to scholars and students in the areas of
media studies, social media, gender and women's studies, sociology
and criminology, digital humanities, and politics.
Why has so much of the public discussion of rape focused on a few
specific cases, and to what extent has this discussion incorporated
the feminist perspective on rape? Rape on Trial explores these
questions and provides answers based on a detailed examination of
the mainstream news coverage of the John and Greta Rideout marital
rape case, the Big Dan's Tavern gang rape case, and the Webb-Dotson
rape recantation case. Lisa M. Cuklanz traces where and how rape
reform ideas were granted legitimacy in mainstream news coverage.
She finds that while the subsequent fictionalized versions
frequently adopted the themes foregrounded in the news coverage,
they usually were more sympathetic toward-and indeed often took
on-the rape victim's point of view.
Depictions of rape on television have evolved dramatically, from
hard-boiled stories about male detectives to more insightful shows
focusing on rape victims. Rape on Prime Time is the first book to
examine those changing depictions of rape. Lisa M. Cuklanz reveals
that prime-time television programs during the 1970s-usually
detective shows-reflected traditional ideas that "real" rape is
perpetrated by brutal strangers upon passive victims. Beginning in
1980, depictions of rape began to include attacks by known
assailants, and victims began to address their feelings. By 1990,
scripts portrayed date and marital rape and paid greater attention
to the trial process, reflecting legal reformers' concerns. While
previous studies have examined one series or genre, Cuklanz
examines programs as dissimilar as Barney Miller, Dallas, The Cosby
Show, and Quincy. She outlines the "basic plot" for rape episodes,
then traces the historical development of rape themes. In each
chapter she includes close analyses of episodes that add depth to
findings derived from scripts and taped episodes. Rape on Prime
Time provides important insight into the social construction of
rape in mainstream mass media since the inception of rape law
reform in 1974.
While there exists a wide range of material covering violence
against women, very little scholarly attention has been paid to
international media treatments of gendered violence. This volume
addresses the gap by providing a broad overview of contemporary
representations of gendered violence, enabling comparison and
contrast in forms of violence and constructions of gender across a
wide range of political and geographic contexts. From nonfictional
accounts of the mass rapes during the Rwandan genocide to the
sexual objectification of women in Serbian media and depictions of
prostitute murders in the Chinese media, this book provides an
overview of media representations of gendered violence around the
globe. In addition to documenting specific challenges and
shortcomings of mainstream representations, chapters present
insight into the various forms of resistance and hope that exist in
each particular area, and analytical essays open up new lines of
inquiry by offering an assessment of the uneven changes that
feminist activism has enabled around the world. Suitable for
students and scholars in women's studies, gender studies, media,
sociology, and education, Local Violence, Global Media can be used
as a supplementary text in courses on media violence, sociology of
media, gendered violence in media, and international perspectives
on women's studies.
Documenting Gendered Violence explores the intersections of
documentary and gendered violence. Several contributors investigate
representations through grounded textual analyses of key films and
videos, including Sex Crimes Unit (2011) and The Invisible War
(2012),and other documentary texts including Youtube, photographs,
and theater. Other chapters use analysis and interviews to explore
how gender violence issues impact production and how these
documentaries become part of collaborations and awareness
movements.
"Documenting Gendered Violence "explores the intersections of
documentary and gendered violence. The contributors investigate
representations through grounded textual analyses of key films and
videos, including "Sex Crimes Unit "(2011) and "The Invisible War
"(2012), and other documentary texts including Youtube,
photographs, and theater. Other chapters use analysis and
interviews to explore how gender violence issues impact production
and how these documentaries become part of collaborations and
awareness movements.
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