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 Saskatchewan

B.A. Honours

Sociology and Women's and Gender Studies

2005

University of British Columbia

M.J.

Journalism

2007

University of Texas at Austin

Ph.D.

Media Studies

2013

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

Feminist Editors and the New Girl Glossies: Fashionable Feminism or Just Another Sexist Rag?

Women's Studies International Forum

2011-01-05

Media critics and feminists have long criticized teen magazines for providing limited substance and promoting a traditional view of femininity. This article challenges this assumption by using a critical discourse analysis to examine the production of girl glossies. Through interviews with four New York teen magazine editors, I unpack some of the contradictions embedded in editors' identifying as feminists while creating a cultural product often deemed anti-feminist. My findings suggest that editors combine practical strategies with a distinctively “third wave ethic” to navigate between corporate and cultural expectations in order to integrate a popular feminism into the magazine content. This third wave ethos however, tends to yield a conception of feminism as primarily a celebration of individual agency, neglecting a larger analysis of structural barriers and power relations. While editors have some success in refocusing teen magazines as sites for individual empowerment, I argue that this is not enough to truly empower teen girls and to challenge inequalities on a societal scale.

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Virtual Feminisms: Girls' Blogging Communities, Feminist Activism, and Participatory Politics

Information, Communication & Society

2011-12-19

While feminist media scholars have recognized the growing importance of feminist blogs, such as Jezebel, Racialicious, and Feministe, to contemporary feminism, the contribution of girls to this feminist blogosphere remains understudied. In this paper, the author addresses this research gap by investigating the complex and diverse ways that girls are using blogging communities to participate in a feminist political activism that reflects their needs as contemporary young feminists within a neoliberal cultural context. This analysis draws upon two case studies of popular blogs by teenage feminists, and interviews that were conducted with four girl bloggers who participated in these two communities. The author argues that through the practice of blogging, teenage girls are actively reframing what it means to participate in feminist politics, drawing on opportunities that the Internet provides to embrace new understandings of community, activism, and even feminism itself.

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Fiercely Real? Tyra Banks and the Making of New Media Celebrity

Feminist Media Studies

2012-11-21

This paper will examine former supermodel Tyra Banks as a contemporary “celebrity entrepreneur,” focusing on Banks' recent shift from television persona to multimedia icon within a neoliberal popular culture. I argue that our contemporary new media environment, marked by convergent media texts, self-branding, and interactivity, provides an ideal space for Banks to produce and globally circulate her postfeminist star text. Through her websites, Facebook, and Twitter confessionals, Banks is able to successfully navigate the contradictory discourses that insist female celebrities be both “authentic” selves while maintaining a disciplined, hegemonic femininity that becomes legitimized and naturalized. I conclude that while Banks' mobilization of a hypervisibility and sense of individual agency generates an authenticity that may resonate with her fans, she remains contained by the neoliberal and postfeminist discourses that allow her to have such a prominent Internet presence. Consequently, this paper serves to raise unexplored questions about the relationship between celebrity culture, postfeminist and neoliberal subjectivities, and new media.

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