Zine infrastructures as forms of organizing within feminist social movements
Maggie Matich,
Elizabeth Parsons and
Rachel Ashman
Gender, Work and Organization, 2024, vol. 31, issue 3, 1049-1071
Abstract:
This paper explores how feminist social movements are organized and re‐generated across and through different media, both online and offline, using the example of zines. We critically examine the emergence and growth of an intersectional feminist zine community through a 6‐year in‐depth qualitative netnographic and ethnographic study. Theoretically, we build on work concerning feminist digital information and archival infrastructures, bringing it together with work on feminist digital activism. We make three key contributions: first to theorize zines and their communities as infrastructures, which cut across the social, digital, and material. Second in understanding the political potential of engagements in zine infrastructures in which the individual and collective are entangled, and third in revealing how the current generation of young feminists move across and work at the interfaces of formats to benefit from their synergistic, but also their agonistic, relations to form new affective solidarities.
Date: 2024
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https://doi.org/10.1111/gwao.12970
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:bla:gender:v:31:y:2024:i:3:p:1049-1071
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