Feminist Media Studies
How White Feminists Gaslight, Gatekeep, and Girlboss
- 160 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About This Book
White feminists performing to maintain privilege
Mean girl feminism encourages girls and women to be sassy, sarcastic, and ironic as feminist performance. Yet it coopts its affect, form, and content from racial oppression and protest while aiming meanness toward people in marginalized groups.
Kim Hong Nguyen's feminist media study examines four types of white mean girl feminism prominent in North American popular culture: the bitch, the mean girl, the power couple, and the global mother. White feminists mime the anger, disempowerment, and resistance felt by people of color and other marginalized groups. Their performance allows them to pursue and claim a special place within established power structures, present as intellectually superior, substitute nonpolitical playacting for a politics of solidarity and community, and position themselves as better, more enlightened masters than patriarchy. But, as Nguyen shows, the racialized meanness found across pop culture opens possibilities for building an intersectional feminist politics that rejects performative civility in favor of turning anger into liberation.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Feminist Civility and the Right to Be Mean
- 1 Bitch Feminism: Blackfaced Girlboss in Feminist Performative/Performativity Politics
- 2 Mean Girl Feminism: Gatekeeping as Illegible Rage
- 3 Power Couple Feminism: Gaslighting and Re-Empowering Heteronormative Aggression
- 4 Global Mother Feminism: Gatekeeping Biopower and Sovereignty
- Conclusion: Abolishing Mean Girl Feminism
- Notes
- Index
- Back Cover