#Metoo and the Politics of Social Change


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Description

Notes on contributors

Acknowledgements

Forward

Walter DeKeseredy

Dedication


Introduction

Chapter 1. Introduction: mapping the emergence of #MeToo

Bianca Fileborn & Rachel Loney-Howes

Part 1: The politics of speaking out and consciousness-raising

Chapter 2. The politics of the personal: the evolution of anti-rape activism from second-wave feminism to #MeToo

Rachel Loney-Howes

Chapter 3. Digital feminist activism: #MeToo and the everyday experiences of challenging rape culture

Kaitlynn Mendes & Jessica Ringrose

Chapter 4. Online feminist activism as performative consciousness-raising: a #MeToo case study

Jessamy Gleeson & Breanan Turner

Chapter 5. You say #MeToo, I say #MiTu: China's online campaigns against sexual abuse

Jing Zeng

Chapter 6. A thousand and one stories: myth and the #MeToo movement

Mary Anne Franks

Part 2: Whose bodies matter? #MeToo and the politics of inclusion

Chapter 7. From 'MeToo' to 'Too Far'? Contesting the boundaries of sexual violence in contemporary activism

Bianca Fileborn & Nickie D. Phillips


Chapter 8. This black body is not yours for the taking

Tess Ryan

Chapter 9. Beyond the bright lights: are minoritized women outside the spotlight able to say #MeToo?

Neha Kagal, Leah Cowan & Huda Jawad

Chapter 10. 'It's not just men and women': LGBTQIA people and #MeToo

Jess Ison

Part 3: Not all that glitters is gold: #MeToo, the entertainment industry and media reporting

Chapter 11. #MeToo and the reasons to be cautious

Lauren Rosewarne

Chapter 12. Substitution activism: the impact of #MeToo in Argentina

María Cecilia Garibotti & Cecilia Marcela Hopp

Chapter 13. Shitty Media Men

Bridget Haire, Christy E. Newman & Bianca Fileborn

Chapter 14. Journalist guidelines and media reporting in the wake of #MeToo

Kathryn Royal

Chapter 15. 'It's a reckoning that is long overdue': reconfiguring the work of popular sex advice after #MeToo

Christy E. Newman & Bridget Haire

Part 4: Ethical possibilities and the future of anti-sexual violence activism

Chapter 16. Consent lies destroy lives: pleasure as the sweetest taboo

Cyndi Darnell

Chapter 17. #MeToo as sex panic.

Heidi Matthews

Chapter 18. Men, masculinities, and #MeToo: mapping men's responses to anti-rape advocacy and inspiring their support for change

Michael Flood

Chapter 19. Understanding anger: ethical responsiveness and the cultural production of celebrity masculinities

Rob Cover

Chapter 20. Online justice in the circuit of capital: #MeToo, marketization and the deformation of sexual ethics

Michael Salter

Conclusion

Chapter 21. Conclusion: 'A new day is on the horizon'?

Rachel Loney-Howes & Bianca Fileborn



Author: Bianca Fileborn
Publisher: Palgrave MacMillan
Published: 10/21/2019
Pages: 350
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.99lbs
Size: 8.27h x 5.83w x 0.78d
ISBN13: 9783030152123
ISBN10: 303015212X
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Criminology
- Social Science | Gender Studies
- Political Science | General

About the Author

Bianca Fileborn is Lecturer in Criminology at the School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Melbourne, Australia. Her research examines the intersections of space/place, identity, culture and sexual violence, and justice responses to sexual violence. Dr. Fileborn was awarded an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award in 2019 to examine justice responses to street harassment. Other recent projects include an examination of safety and sexual violence at Australian music festivals, sexual violence in licensed venues, and LGBTIQ+ young people's involvement in family violence. She is the author of Reclaiming The Night-Time Economy: Unwanted Sexual Attention in Pubs and Clubs (Palgrave Macmillan).

Rachel Loney-Howes is Lecturer in Criminology in the School of Health and Society at the University of Wollongong, Australia. A critical socio-legal studies scholar, her research explores the nature, history, and scope of anti-rape activism, with a particular focus on the relationship between activism, support services, and law reform.