Results 121 to 130 of about 2,538 (164)
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Cyberfeminism, technology, and international 'development'

Gender & Development, 1999
Feminists from diverse backgrounds are considering the implications of the spread of Internet technology, and questioning its benefits for women in developing countries. Apart from having access to the Internet, women must also be able to define the content and shape of cyberspace.
Gajjala, Radhika, Mamidipudi, Annapurna
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From Feminism to Cyberfeminism

2005
In 1984 bell hooks reflects on the growing disinterest in feminism as a radical political movement and the increasing inability to arrive at a unified definition of feminism itself. A decade later Anna Yeatman writes of the ways in which academic feminism or femocracy has been characterized by various attempts to respond to challenges of the Otherness.
Ožbolt, Danijela, Vukelić, Tatjana
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Cyberfeminism, Iranian Style

Feminist Media Histories, 2017
The June 2009 uprising following Iran's presidential election sparked the immediate scattering of its women's rights leaders across the globe. Activists living in exile took their activities online to pursue on-the-ground projects, initiating online campaigns and raising feminist awareness.
K. Soraya Batmanghelichi, Leila Mouri
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Mapping Caribbean Cyberfeminisms

2020
Curatorial note from Digital Pedagogy in the Humanities: Tonya Haynes is founder of the Red for Gender blog, one of the most important digital Caribbean feminist networks operating today, as well as the CatchAFyah Caribbean Feminist Network. Haynes, as someone operating in digital and diaspora activist spaces, offers an illuminating read of the ...
Haynes, Tonya, Johnson, Jessica Marie
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technics of cyberfeminism

2003
FKW // Zeitschrift für Geschlechterforschung und visuelle Kultur, No.
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Wajcman Confronts Cyberfeminism

Social Studies of Science, 2006
Like any artefact, a book configures its audience. However explicitly or implicitly, an author imagines her reader(s) in the particular ways that she crafts her text. And, as readers, we find ourselves and our interests variously present or absent, represented or overlooked in the texts that we take up.
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Cyberfeminisms and Cyberliteracies

Cyberfeminism is a term that was coined in the 1990s, in an era where digital technology was proliferating rapidly for fast communication, while creating various digital cultures. Born out of an increasing prevalence of women on the internet raising their voice and expressing identities, cyberfeminism has had a long history of discussing what is ...
Tarishi Verma   +2 more
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Developing a corporeal cyberfeminism: beyond cyberutopia

New Media & Society, 2010
This article discusses — and rejects — cyberutopia, an idealized theory of internet use that requires users to leave their bodies behind when online. The author instead calls for a cyberfeminist perspective in relation to studying the internet and other new media, centrally locating corporeality and embodiment.
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The Hauntology of Chinese Cyberfeminism

Feminist Media Histories
This article proposes hauntology as a method for examining Chinese cyberfeminist histories beyond immediately accessible empirical evidence and documentation on event-based digital activism. By bringing Jen Liu’s performance piece GHOST__WORLD (2024) into conversation with the censored cyberfeminist project Feminist Voices (2010–18), it investigates ...
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