Feminism in the Digital Age

Books

  • Brodsky, J. K. (2022). Dismantling the patriarchy, bit by bit: Art, feminism, and digital technology. Bloomsbury Visual Arts.
  • Cuboniks, L. (2018). The xenofeminist manifesto: A politics for alienation. Verso Books. 
  • D’Ignazio, C., & Klein, L. F. (2020). Data feminism. MIT Press.
  • Fotopoulou, A. (2016). Feminist activism and digital networks: Between empowerment and vulnerability. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Jarrett, K. (2016). Feminism, labour, and digital media: The digital housewife. Routledge.
  • MacDonald, S., Wiens, B. I., MacArthur, M., & Radzikowska, M. (2022). Networked feminisms: Activist assemblies and digital practices. Lexington Books.
  • Mendes, K. (2019). Digital feminist activism: girls and women fight back against rape culture. Oxford University Press.
  • Olszanowski, M. (2015). The 1×1 common: The role of Instagram’s hashtag in the development of and maintenance of feminist exchange. In N. Rumbukkana (Ed.), Hashtag publics and the power of political discursive networks (pp. 229–243). Peter Lang.
  • Perez, C. C. (2019). Invisible women: Exposing data bias in a world designed for men.Vintage Books.
  • Press, A. L. (2021). Media-ready feminism and everyday sexism: How U.S. audiences create meaning across platforms. SUNY Press.
  • Russell, L. (2020). Glitch feminism: A manifesto. Verso Books. 
  • Steele, C. K. (2021). Digital Black feminism. New York University Press.

Scholarly/Peer-Reviewed

Popular Press

Videos

Other

  • Anderson, E., & Peña-Guzmán, D. (2022). Feminism (feat. Carol Hay) [Audio Podcast Episode]. In Overthink. https://www.overthinkpodcast.com/episodes/episode-58
  • Digital Feminist Collective is a research commons gathering projects on digital feminisms that collectively ask after the future of feminism and feminist activism, the meaning and limits of global feminist solidarity, creativity, and transnational collaboration.