2015
DOI: 10.1080/14680777.2015.1008749
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#Safetytipsforladies: Feminist Twitter Takedowns of Victim Blaming

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Cited by 72 publications
(56 citation statements)
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“…The hashtags #YesAllWomen and #NotOkay, which emerged after the Isla Vista shootings and Trump Access Hollywood video respectively, laid the discursive groundwork for #MeToo's emergence [45,60,77,85]. Between these more visible hashtags, a number of networked counterpublics have coalesced around other hashtags addressing sexual violence against women, including #WhyIStayed [21], #IAmNotAfraidToSayIt [58], #IAmJada [94], #AskThicke [88], #safetytipsforladies [76], and #TheEmptyChair [45]. Collectively, these hashtag campaigns amplify a rejoinder to the mainstream public's inattention to sexual violence against women as an issue of public health [21,78].…”
Section: Networked Disclosures Through Hashtag Activismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The hashtags #YesAllWomen and #NotOkay, which emerged after the Isla Vista shootings and Trump Access Hollywood video respectively, laid the discursive groundwork for #MeToo's emergence [45,60,77,85]. Between these more visible hashtags, a number of networked counterpublics have coalesced around other hashtags addressing sexual violence against women, including #WhyIStayed [21], #IAmNotAfraidToSayIt [58], #IAmJada [94], #AskThicke [88], #safetytipsforladies [76], and #TheEmptyChair [45]. Collectively, these hashtag campaigns amplify a rejoinder to the mainstream public's inattention to sexual violence against women as an issue of public health [21,78].…”
Section: Networked Disclosures Through Hashtag Activismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, C. Rentschler (2015) and S. Thrift (2014) both argue that the construction, use, and distribution of feminist memes depict new forms of communication, community, and conscious raising. They suggest that feminists' memes are new "weapons" of feminist cultural critique and models of political agency for doing feminism (Ibid: 3).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As reported by Poynter (2010), Salter (2013), Castells (2015), and Cover (2015), social media can have a significant impact on social movements and it has allowed Saudi women to be heard in the KSA and worldwide (Al-Rasheed 2013; Doumato 2010). Khamis (2014), Rentschler (2015), Clark (2016), and Newsom and Lengel (2012) emphasize the key role Twitter plays in publicizing women's voices and movements. In particular, Twitter has empowered women to express their opinions and surmount gender-based legislation and norms that exclude them from public and political life since it allows "the exercise of agency by women where previously (at least in modern history) no comparable domain has existed" (Samin 2008, p. 207).…”
Section: ‫أغلب‬ ‫الرجال‬ ‫الذين‬ ‫ي‬mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Their utilization of social media and their public engagement with women's issues have put them at the forefront of change and publicized their issues in ways that were not possible before social media. Twitter, in particular, has been utilized in online movements to raise awareness of issues such as violence and sexual harassment, which are often misrepresented in mainstream media or deemed by many as belonging to the private sphere (Clark 2016;Khamis 2014;Rentschler 2015). For example, in her study of the hashtag #whyIstayed, Clark (2016) has examined the ways in which Twitter users responded to predominant views about domestic violence.…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%