Producing Women: The Internet, Traditional Femininity, Queerness, and Creativity

Producing Women: The Internet, Traditional Femininity, Queerness, and Creativity

by Michele White (Author)

Synopsis

Producing Women examines the ways femininity is produced through new media. Michele White considers how women are constructed, produce themselves as subjects, form vital production cultures on sites like Etsy, and deploy technological processes to reshape their identities and digital characteristics. She studies the means through which women market traditional female roles, are viewed, and produce and restructure their gendered, raced, eroticized, and sexual identities. Incorporating a range of examples across numerous forms of media-including trash the dress wedding photography, Internet how-to instructions about zombie walk brides, nail polish blogging, DIY crafting, and reborn doll production-Producing Women elucidates women's production cultures online, and the ways that individuals can critically study and engage with these practices.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 246
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 26 Mar 2015

ISBN 10: 1138776785
ISBN 13: 9781138776784

Media Reviews
With smart readings of websites, blogs, and spaces of e-commerce in which women produce a wide range of feminine identities, Michele White delivers an intriguing analysis of gendered creativity online. A crucial read for students and scholars of gender, sexuality, and internet culture. -Elana Levine, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee

From the ambivalence of residue glitter makeup to the visceral tactility of crafted reborn dolls, White examines gender, normativity, and vernacular production on online platforms with skill and critical insight. Producing Women is recommended reading for all interested in how the norms of femininity are lived, negotiated, appropriated, and made, and how women's production cultures matter online. -Susanna Paasonen, University of Turku, Finland

White's study is significant in its depth of treatment of women's production cultures on the Internet. This study should attract a new generation of critics and scholars who will find White's interpretation of the websites, production of material on said websites, and the complicated relationship that women share with the Internet as fresh, provocative, and nuanced. -Kelly J. Hunnings, Feminist Media Studies, Vol. 16 No. 2

Author Bio
Michele White is an Associate Professor in the Department of Communication at Tulane University. She teaches Internet and new media studies, film and television studies, visual culture studies, science fiction and technology literature, gender and queer theory, and critical race and postcolonial studies. She is the author of Buy It Now: Lessons from eBay (Duke University Press, 2012) and The Body and the Screen: Theories of Internet Spectatorship (MIT Press, 2006).