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Gender, Media and Voice
Details
This book explores the increasing imperatives to speak up, to speak out, and to 'find one's voice' in contemporary media culture. It considers how, for women in particular, this seems to constitute a radical break with the historical idealization of silence and demureness. However, the author argues that there is a growing and pernicious gap between the seductive promise of voice, and voice as it actually exists. While brutal instruments such as the ducking stool and scold's bridle are no longer in use to punish women's speech, Kay proposes that communicative injustice now operates in much more insidious ways. The wide-ranging chapters explore the mediated 'voices' of women such as Monica Lewinsky, Hannah Gadsby, Diane Abbott, and Yassmin Abdel-Magied, as well as the problems and possibilities of gossip, nagging, and the 'traumatised voice' in television talk shows. It critiques the optimistic claims about the 'unleashing' of women's voices post-#MeToo and examines the ways that women's speech continues to be trivialized and devalued. Communicative justice, the author argues, is not about empowering individuals to 'find their voice', but about collectively transforming the whole communicative terrain.
Argues that inequalities in language-use and public speech should also be understood as themselves constituting a deep form of gender injustice. Explores the hypocrisies within the ostensible promotion of female public voice and the insidious ways in which female voices are continuously devalued within our media. Provides unique and highly relevant arguments about female power in the wake of #MeToo. Uses a breadth of case studies to explore an impressive range of interdisciplinary ideas with nuance and subtlety.
Autorentext
Jilly Boyce Kay is lecturer in Media and Communication at the University of Leicester, UK, specializing in feminist theory. She is co-editor of The Wedding Spectacle Across Contemporary Media and Culture, and has also published on feminist anger, the suffragettes, reality television, and women's television histories. She edits the Cultural Commons section in the European Journal of Cultural Studies.
Inhalt
Chapter 1: Introduction: Gender, voice and value.- Chapter 2: The democratic possibilities of television talk.- Chapter 3: Intimate voices: television talk and the re-gendering of the public sphere.- Chapter 4: 'Pink ghettos': rethinking women's talk programming.- Chapter 5: Speaking bitterness: feminism and televisual consciousness-raising.- Chapter 6: 'Out of place': women's talk in political debate programmes.- Chapter 7: 'One of the lads': comedy panel shows and the gendering of 'banter'.- Chapter 8: Conclusion: Re-valuing voice ****
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09783030472863
- Sprache Englisch
- Auflage 1st edition 2020
- Größe H216mm x B153mm x T16mm
- Jahr 2020
- EAN 9783030472863
- Format Fester Einband
- ISBN 3030472868
- Veröffentlichung 21.07.2020
- Titel Gender, Media and Voice
- Autor Jilly Boyce Kay
- Untertitel Communicative Injustice and Public Speech
- Gewicht 383g
- Herausgeber Springer International Publishing
- Anzahl Seiten 204
- Lesemotiv Verstehen
- Genre Sozialwissenschaften, Recht & Wirtschaft