MAWM - Online Communities
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Assessing the discursive legacy: online feminist communities
Australian studies have shown how social movements other than the women’s movement are operating through the internet (eg Edwards 2005). We have chosen the internet as a site for exploring discursive impact in part because of the way the internet has been conceived as an alternative space for ‘new’ young women’s feminism (Harris 1998; 2003), as well as because the internet provides new resources for existing social movement organisations.
The study will begin by identifying appropriate cues for inclusion under the rubric of ‘feminist discourse’ even where feminism itself is not the obvious marker, as with the e-list linking national women's organisations. The findings of the internet case study will be analysed with a view to tracing changes in feminist discourse, specifically between generations of women (Maddison 2004). The findings will be tested against existing literature that explores expressions of feminist discourse in popular culture (eg Hollows & Mosely 2006), where concerns about the vulnerability of this legacy to market forces and the commodification of discourse are expressly addressed.
Frances Shaw is the member of the team with responsibility for developing the study of online feminist communities, as her doctoral project. She is supervised by Sarah Maddison.
Where does this fit in the project as a whole? See Project Structure
