Jessalynn Keller

Assistant Professor, Department of Communication, Media and Film University of Calgary

  • Calgary AB

Expert in girls'/youth media, digital cultures, contemporary feminisms, & celebrity

Contact

Media

Social

Biography

Jessalynn Keller is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication, Media, & Film at the University of Calgary, Canada. Her research explores girls’ media cultures, contemporary digital feminisms and mediated celebrity culture. She is author of Girls’ Feminist Blogging in a Postfeminist Age (Routledge 2015) and has published her research in journals and edited anthologies that include Journal of Gender Studies, Continuum: Journal of Media & Cultural Studies, Feminist Media Studies, Information, Communication & Society, and the forthcoming Mediated Girlhoods 2. Jessalynn is a founding steering committee member of the International Girlhood Studies Association and was a plenary speaker at the 2016 Console-ing Passions International Conference on Television, Video, Audio, New Media, and Feminism. She is currently co-writing (with Kaitlynn Mendes and Jessica Ringrose) Digital Feminist Activism: Girls and Women Fight Back Against Rape Culture (Oxford University Press 2018), co-editing (with Maureen Ryan) Emergent Feminisms: Challenging Postfeminist Media Cultures, and conducting ethnographic research on anti-Trump “girl news.”

Areas of Expertise

Girls' media cultures
Celebrity Culture
Ethnographic and Qualitative Methods and Analysis
Digital Media
Feminisms and Gender Studies
Blogging and Social Media
Magazine industry

Education

University of Texas at Austin

Ph.D.

Media Studies

2013

University of British Columbia

M.J.

Journalism

2007

University of Saskatchewan

B.A. Honours

Sociology and Women's and Gender Studies

2005

Languages

  • English

Media Appearances

"How to combat sexism in 2017? With an app, of course."

Christian Science Monitor  online

2017-01-11

Was interviewed based on current research on digital rape culture activism.

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Event Appearances

Girl News, Woke Brands: Anti-Trump Resistance in Teen Vogue

Society for Cinema and Media Studies Annual Conference  Chicago, Illinois

2017-03-24

Research Grants

Documenting Digital Feminist Activism

Arts and Humanities Research Council (UK)

2014-07-21

Collaborative project with Kaitlynn Mendes (PI) and Jessica Ringrose (Co-I).

Articles

Girls' Feminist Blogging in a Postfeminist Age (book)

Routledge

2015-11-01

Girls’ Feminist Blogging in a Postfeminist Age explores the practices of U.S.-based teenage girls who actively maintain feminist blogs and participate in the feminist blogosphere as readers, writers, and commenters on platforms including Blogspot, Facebook, Twitter, and Tumblr. Drawing on interviews with bloggers between the ages of fifteen and twenty-one, as well as discursive textual analyses of feminist blogs and social networking postings authored by teenage girls, Keller addresses how these girls use blogging as a practice to articulate contemporary feminisms and craft their own identities as feminists and activists. In this sense, feminist girl bloggers defy hegemonic postfeminist and neoliberal girlhood subjectivities, a finding that Keller uses to complicate both academic and popular assertions that suggest teenage girls are uninterested in feminism.Instead, Keller maintains that these young bloggers employ digital media production to educate their peers about feminism, connect with like-minded activists, write feminist history, and make feminism visible within popular culture, practices that build upon and continue a lengthy tradition of American feminism into the twenty-first century. Girls’ Feminist Bloggers in a Postfeminist Age challenges readers to not only reconsider teenage girls’ online practices as politically and culturally significant, but to better understand their crucial role in a thriving contemporary feminism.

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Speaking Unspeakable Things: Documenting Digital Feminist Responses to Rape Culture

Journal of Gender Studies

2016-07-28

This paper examines the ways in which girls and women are using digital media platforms to challenge the rape culture they experience in their everyday lives; including street harassment, sexual assault, and the policing of the body and clothing in school settings. Focusing on three international cases, including the anti-street harassment site Hollaback!, the hashtag #BeenRapedNeverReported, and interviews with teenage Twitter activists, the paper asks: What experiences of harassment, misogyny and rape culture are girls and women responding to? How are girls and women using digital media technologies to document experiences of sexual violence, harassment, and sexism? And, why are girls and women choosing to mobilize digital media technologies in such a way? Employing an approach that includes ethnographic methods such as semi-structured interviews, content analysis, discursive textual analysis, and affect theories, we detail a range of ways that women and girls are using social media platforms to speak about, and thus make visible, experiences of rape culture. We argue that this digital mediation enables new connections previously unavailable to girls and women, allowing them to redraw the boundaries between themselves and others.

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Why Intergenerational Feminist Media Studies?

Feminist Media Studies

2016-07-01

Feminism and generation are live and ideologically freighted issues that are subject to a substantial amount of media engagement. The figure of the millennial and the baby boomer, for example, regularly circulate in mainstream media, often accompanied by hyperbolic and vitriolic discourses and affects of intergenerational feminist conflict. In addition, theories of feminist generation and waves have been and continue to be extensively critiqued within feminist theory. Given the compelling criticisms directed at these categories, we ask: why bother examining and foregrounding issues of generation, intergeneration, and transgeneration in feminist media studies? Whilst remaining sceptical of linearity and familial metaphors and of repeating reductive, heteronormative, and racist versions of feminist movements, we believe that the concept of generation does have critical purchase for feminist media scholars. Indeed, precisely because of the problematic ways that is it used, and the prevalence of it as a volatile, yet only too palpable, organizing category, generation is both in need of continual critical analysis, and is an important tool to be used—with care and nuance—when examining the multiple routes through which power functions in order to marginalize, reward, and oppress. Exploring both diachronic and synchronic understandings of generation, this article emphasizes the use of conjunctural analysis to excavate the specific historical conditions that impact upon and create generation. This special issue of Feminist Media Studies covers a range of media forms—film, games, digital media, television, print media, as well as practices of media production, intervention, and representation. The articles also explore how figures at particular lifestages—particularly the girl and the aging woman—are constructed relationally, and circulate, within media, with particular attention to sexuality. Throughout the issue there is an emphasis on exploring the ways in which the category of generation is mobilized in order to gloss sexism, racism, ageism, class oppression, and the effects of neoliberalism.

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