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Full Description
This edited anthology critically engages with the intersection of feminism, politics, and popular culture, with an emphasis on how shifts in cultural discourse have shaped the perception, understanding, and practice of feminist thought in contemporary society. Drawing on Foucault, this volume provides a critical framework for understanding how feminist movements—particularly second-wave feminism—were commodified and subsumed into capitalist logics. It demonstrates how feminist aims like gender equity and bodily autonomy are rendered into categories that can be surveilled, managed, and ultimately co-opted once they are made legible to power and argues that this transformation diminishes the efficacy of feminist action, as its revolutionary potential becomes subsumed into the very structures it seeks to resist. The future of feminism is thus framed as a question of how to contend with its past: How do we reconcile the radical aims of the second wave with the neoliberalization of contemporary feminism? Each chapter bridges scholarly theory with contemporary analysis, making use of academic sources as well as cultural texts like media. This volume will be of interest to students and scholars in feminist theory, gender studies, literary criticism, critical theory, and pop culture studies.
Contents
1. Introduction: Feminisms, Genealogy, and the Current Moment.- Part I The Politics of Feminism.- 2. Honey, Whose Home: The Racial-Gender Implications of #Tradwives.- 3. Reclaiming Feminism Through Consciousness-Raising Education.- 4. The Takeover of Imperialist Feminism: Returning to the Second Wave, Clinton, Harris, and Falling Short of True Intersectionality.- 5. When Fandom, Politics, and Feminisms Intersect: A Tumblr Autoethnography of Fourth Wave as Multifaceted, Emotional Pedagogy.- 6. 'No One Likes a Mad Woman': Taylor Swift and the Politics of Gendered Subordination in the 21st Century.- Part II The Feminisms of Politics, Feminisms of Pop Culture.- 7. Digital Distortions: How Social Media Algorithms Reshape Feminist Discourse.- 8. Jill Biden and Kamala Harris in Vogue: A Comparative Study of Political Representations of Women in the 17th and 21st Centuries.- 9. Femininomenonic Discourse: Lesbophobia and Social Media Crossroads.- 10. Sexist Implications of the TikTok Trend 'Girl Math'.- 11. Ecological Joy and Fabulous, Sustainable Fashion Activists: Expressions of Desiring Selves Struggling for Climate Justice and Beauty.- 12. Naming "The Donfather" and Name-Calling "The Ho": Sacred and Profane Misogynoir in Election 2024.- 13. Heteropessimism and the Denial of the Lesbian Erotics.- 14. Alt-Rock Feminist Icons: Advancing Feminism from the 1990s and Beyond.- 15. Bitch, Please: Neoliberal Feminist Responses to Sabrina Carpenter's Man's Best Friend.- Part III Feminist Futures.- 16. 'What we Need is a Femininomenon': How the Sapphic Themes of Popular Music are Shaping Feminism's Future.- 17. Death Reclaimed as a Radically Feminist Escape.- 18. The Cunt-loving Mystique: Embracing and Representing Women's Sex-empowerment in Millennial Online Poetry and Visual Arts.- 19. Transfeminist Film and the Immediacy of History.- 20. Dissociative Feminism and the Cultural Politics of Passivity.



