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|a 302.23
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|a Boyle, Karen.
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|a The Routledge Companion to Gender, Media and Violence.
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|a 1st ed.
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|a Milton :
|b Taylor & Francis Group,
|c 2023.
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|c ©2024.
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|a 1 online resource (657 pages)
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|a Routledge Companions to Gender Series
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|a Intro -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Figures and tables -- Contributors -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Thinking about gender, violence and the media in a pandemic -- What's in a name? -- Continuum thinking -- Organisation of the collection -- Coda: Representing violence ethically in academic work -- Note -- References -- Part 1: News -- News: Introduction to Part 1 -- Notes -- References -- 1. "Sensational spikes" and "isolated incidents": Examining the misrepresentation of domestic abuse by the media using the case studies of football and Covid-19 -- Introduction -- Background -- Media and domestic abuse -- Media frames and narratives -- Case study 1: Domestic abuse and football -- Domestic abuse, femicides and Covid-19 -- Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- Note -- References -- 2. The media and male victim-survivors of domestic abuse -- Introduction -- Male victim-survivors don't exist -- Domestic abuse is not harmful to men -- Domestic abuse is worse for men -- Women are not capable of violence and abuse -- There are equal numbers of male victim-survivors to women -- All male victims are abused by women -- The role of the media -- Sympathy and sexualisation in portrayals of perpetrators -- Creating a hierarchy of domestic abuse -- Who are seen as the experts? -- Has there been progress? -- Conclusion -- References -- 3. Invisible feelings, anti-Asian violences and abolition feminisms -- Invisible feelings and the visibility of violence against Asian women -- Politicising Asian American women as victims -- Dangerous and endangered positions -- Conclusion: Abolition feminisms -- Acknowledgements -- Notes -- References -- 4. Towards a fair justice system in Canada: Women and girls homicide database project -- Context and methods -- General characteristics -- Key findings -- Future directions.
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|a Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 5. Familicide, gender and "mental illness": Beyond false dualisms -- Reading complex violences -- Constructing dualisms -- Some roots to the polarity -- The motivations and context of familicide -- Gendering distress among perpetrators of familicide -- Gendering the mobilisation of distress by familicide perpetrators -- Conclusion -- References -- 6. Femminicidio in Italian televised news: A case study of La Vita in Diretta -- Introduction -- Understanding femminicidio -- Methodology -- The linguistic framing of femminicidio in La Vita in Diretta -- Conclusions -- References -- 7. Cruel benevolence: Vulnerable menaces, menacing vulnerabilities and the white male vigilante trope -- Macho men, media and the emasculated state -- Three "ordinary blokes", two weeping women -- Vulnerable menaces -- Deresponsibilisation -- Disempowerment -- Discourses of service and sacrifice -- Menacing vulnerabilities -- Cruel benevolence -- Conclusion -- Note -- References -- 8. Exploring US news media portrayals of girls' violence in the 1980s and 1990s: The emergence of a moral panic -- The current study -- Methodology -- News coverage selection -- Analysis -- Findings -- The panic surrounding the discovery of girls in gangs -- The panic surrounding the discovery of girls' gratuitous violence -- Discussion -- References -- 9. Child sexual exploitation and scapegoating minority communities -- Introduction -- Grooming and sexual exploitation -- Race, gender, crime and moral panics in the UK -- The portrayal of victims -- Constructing child sexual exploitation as a cultural problem -- Conclusion -- References -- 10. Hidden or hypervisible? Mapping the making of a moral panic over female genital mutilation/cutting -- Introduction -- Savages and saviours -- Tip of the iceberg? -- Making of the moral panic on FGM/C in the UK.
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|a Femonationalism in the UK anti FGM/C discourse -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 11. Examining the Zimbabwean news media's framing of men as victims of sexual assault -- Introduction -- News media's framing of sexual assault in Zimbabwe and beyond -- Men as victims of sexual assault -- Methodology -- Discrediting the narratives of male victims of sexual assault -- Sensationalising male sexual abuse -- Humanising female perpetrators -- Conclusion -- References -- 12. The HIV man, Alexandra man and Hotboy: Swedish news coverage of rape as a folklore of fear -- Introduction -- The HIV man -- The Alexandra man -- Hotboy -- Discussion -- Notes -- References -- 13. Forward and backwards: Sexual violence in Portuguese news media -- Introduction -- Sexual violence in Portugal: Law, media training and media coverage -- The Casa Pia case -- The Telheiras case -- The Gaia case -- The Mayorga/Ronaldo case -- Final remarks -- Notes -- References -- 14. Representations of gender-based violence against children in Nigeria -- Introduction -- Methodology -- Discussion of findings -- Conclusion -- Note -- References -- 15. Media, courts and "#RiceBunny" testimonies in China -- #RiceBunny in court -- Censorship, professional codes and interpersonal networks -- Disinformation becomes a weapon for the accused -- Nonfiction platforms: fragile but important -- Citizen media: report to change -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 16. Journalism, sexual violence and social responsibility -- Introduction -- Bad" journalism from good people -- Guidelines and codes of conduct -- Journalistic doxa and habitus: direction, experience, and principles -- Journalistic deontology and sexual violence -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Part 2: Representing reality -- Representing reality: Introduction to Part 2 -- References.
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|a 17. The politics of the traumatised voice: Communicative injustice and structural silencing in contemporary media culture -- Introduction -- Histories of communicative injustice: from ducking stools to doxxing -- #MeToo, trauma narratives and "wounded identity -- Trauma and contemporary media culture -- AOC, Hannah Gadsby and the "weaponisation" of trauma -- Conclusion -- References -- 18. Public survivors: The burdens and possibilities of speaking as a survivor -- Going public: the emergence of the public survivor -- The burdens of public survivors -- The limits of public recognition -- Conclusion: public survivors and social change -- References -- 19. Telling an authentic, relatable #MeToo story on YouTube -- Introduction -- Recognising and not recognising sexual violence when it happens -- Reasons for not reporting. How institutions, communities, and families respond -- Current more correct understanding of sexual violence -- The post-feminist hero's journey -- Silences -- Conclusion -- References -- 20. Mental images and emotive voices in true crime podcasts focused on female victims -- Sensationalised (mental) images -- Emotive voices -- Concluding remarks -- References -- 21. Sexual violence and social justice: The celebrity #MeToo documentary in the US -- Feminist true crime -- #MeToo monsters -- Intersectional #MeToo -- Conclusion: activating change -- Notes -- References -- 22. Remediating the "Yorkshire Ripper" event in the era of feminist true crime -- Notes -- References -- 23. Class, victim credibility and the Pygmalion problem in real crime dramas Three Girls and Unbelieveable -- Introduction -- Three Girls (2017) and Unbelievable (2019): some parallels -- The class politics of credibility -- Victim hierarchies: narratives of fallen women -- Doing away with Pygmalion -- Notes -- References.
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|a 24. Victimhood and violence: Weaponising white femininity in South Africa -- Weaponising white women -- Farm murders" and GBV -- Weaponising whiteness -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 25. Pregnant and disappeared: The Missing White Woman Syndrome in magazines -- Introduction -- The analytical origins of the Missing White Woman Syndrome -- Magazines and the celebrification of missing white women -- Erin Corwin is "Pregnant and Missing -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 26. Discourses and narratives of gender-based violence in Greek women's magazines -- Introduction -- Belonging and exclusion -- Methodology -- The "women-ology" repertoire -- The "dynamics of exclusion" repertoire -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 27. Just a fantasy: How the discourse of fantasy attempts to resolve the conflicts of porn consumption -- Methods and sample -- Troubling the line -- The conflicts of porn -- The discursive function of fantasy -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 28. Patriarchal protectors of the national body: Violence, masculinity and gendered constructions of the US/Mexico border -- Introduction -- Imagining, constructing and policing the US/Mexico border -- Masculinity, vigilantes and state agents on the US/Mexico border -- The savage Other -- The vulnerable woman and child -- The patriarchal protector -- Conclusion -- References -- 29. Militarised masculinity and the perpetration of violence in Chilean documentary -- Ulysses's Odyssey by Lorena Manríquez -- El pacto de Adriana/Adriana's Pact -- De-normalising the continuum of violence -- Note -- References -- 30. Women's activist filmmaking against gendered violence in Pakistan -- Introduction -- Swara: A Bridge Over Troubled Waters () -- The activist films of Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgement -- Notes -- References.
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|a Part 3: Gender-based violence online.
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|a Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
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|a Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2023. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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|a Electronic books.
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700 |
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|a Berridge, Susan.
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776 |
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|i Print version:
|a Boyle, Karen
|t The Routledge Companion to Gender, Media and Violence
|d Milton : Taylor & Francis Group,c2023
|z 9781032061368
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797 |
2 |
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|a ProQuest (Firm)
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830 |
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|a Routledge Companions to Gender Series
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856 |
4 |
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|u https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/matrademy/detail.action?docID=7281674
|z Click to View
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