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Working Women on Screen: Paid Labour and Fourth Wave Feminism critically examines screen media representations of women's participation in the contemporary labour market. The edited collection brings together contributions on Aesthetic Labour; Power, Politics, and Neoliberal Industries; and Sex, Sexuality, and Relationships.
Within the context of fourth wave feminism, there has been a new proliferation in the global media landscape of representations of women's paid labour. This has coincided with the development of critical and ideological issues surrounding intersectionality and culture wars, as well as the impacts of recessions, political upheavals, and pandemics. Workplace dynamics and post-#MeToo politics have led to the complexification of structures, oppressions and relationships that impact what women can do for money. As a result, the working woman is now a constant presence on our screens, though articulated in widely divergent ways. The chapters within this collection critique issues that are deeply embedded in neoliberal conceptions of contemporary feminism, such as aspects of lean-in culture, structural oppression, and women's experiences of the glass ceiling and glass cliff. The volume as a whole will analyse representations related to the intersecting dynamics of gender, race, class, sexuality, and disability in television, film, social media and video games. It will be key reading for students and scholars in media, gender, and cultural studies.
Examines screen media representations of women's participation in the contemporary labor market Reviews issues that are deeply embedded in neoliberal conceptions of contemporary feminism Analyzes representations related to the intersecting dynamics of gender, race, class, sexuality, and disability
Auteur
Dr Ellie Tomsett is a Senior Lecturer in Media and Communication at Birmingham City University, UK.
Dr Nathalie Weidhase is a Lecturer in Media and Communication at the University of Surrey, UK.
Dr Poppy Wilde is a Senior Lecturer in Media and Communication at Birmingham City University, UK.
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