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Table of Contents: Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

The Ada Journal Reader

Eds. Karen Estlund, Radhika Gajjala, and Carol Stabile

Table of Contents

Part 1: Methods, Scholarship, and Publishing

  1. Mia Consalvo (2012), “Confronting Toxic Gamer Culture: A Challenge for Feminist Game Studies Scholars,” Issue 1: Conversations Across the Field (Eds. Kim Sawchuk and Carol Stabile)

  2. Anna Lauren Hoffman and Raina Bloom (2016), “Digitizing Books, Obscuring Women’s Work: Google Books, Librarians, and Ideologies of Access,” Issue 9: Open Call (Eds. Radhika Gajjala and Carol Stabile)

  3. Tressie McMillan Cottom (2015), “‘Who Do You Think You Are?’: When Marginality Meets Academic Microcelebrity,” Issue 7: Open Call (Eds. Carol Stabile and Radhika Gajjala)

  4. David Pontille and Didier Torny (2014), “The Blind Shall See! The Question of Anonymity in Journal Peer Review,” Issue 4: Publication and its Discontents (Eds. Bryce Peake and Karen Estlund)

Part 2: Emerging Technology and Media

  1. Crystal Abidin (2015), “Communicative❤️Intimacies: Influencers and Perceived Interconnectedness,” Issue 8: Gender, Globalization & the Digital (Ed. Roopika Risam)

  2. Kristina Bell, Nicholas Taylor, and Christopher Kampe (2015), “Of Headshots and Hugs: Challenging Hypermasculinity through The Walking Dead Play,” Issue 7: Open Call (Eds. Carol Stabile and Rahika Gajjala)

  3. Shelleen M. Greene (2016), “Bina48: Gender, Race, and Queer Artificial Life,” Issue 9: Open Call (Eds. Carol Stabile and Radhika Gajjala)

  4. Adrienne Shaw (2013), “On Not Becoming Gamers: Moving Beyond the Constructed Audience,” Issue 2: Feminist Game Studies (Ed. Nina Huntemann)

Part 3: Systems and Networks of Support

  1. Moya Bailey (2013), “’Shaping God’: The Power of Octavia Butler’s Black Feminist and Womanist SciFi Visions in the Shaping of a New world – An Interview with Adrienne Maree Brown,” Issue 3, Feminist Science Fiction (Ed. Alexis Lothian)

  2. Grace Dillon (2017), “The NishPossessed: Reading Le Guin in Indian Country,” Issue 12: Radical Speculation and Ursula K. Le Guin (Ed. Alexis Lothian)

  3. Darnell Moore and Monica J. Casper (2014), “Love in the Time of Racism,” Issue 5: Queer Feminist Media Praxis (Eds. Aristea Fotopoulo and Kate O’Riordan)

  4. Tuesday Smillie (2017), “Radical Imagination and The Left Hand of Darkness,” Issue 12: Radical Speculation and Ursula K. Le Guin (Ed. Alexis Lothian)

Part 4: Race and Racism

  1. Mia Fischer and K. Mohrman (2015), “Black Deaths Matter? Sousveillance and the Invisibility of Black Life,” Issue 10: Open Call (Eds. Carol Stabile, Sarah T. Hamid, and Radhika Gajjala)

  2. Janelle Hobson (2016), “Black Beauty and Digital Spaces: The New Visibility Politics,” Issue 10: Open Call (Eds. Carol Stabile, Sarah T. Hamid, and Radhika Gajjala)

  3. Jenny Ungbha Korn (2018), “Race and Resistance Amid Feminism, Priming, and Capitalism: The (surprisingly-globalized) Visual of an Asian American Woman Activist,” Issue 14: Visualizing Protest: Transnational Approaches to the Aesthetics of Dissent (Eds. Ela Przybylo, Veronika Novoselova, and Sara Rodrigues)

  4. B. Afeni McNeely Cobham (2016), “Sisters Rap the Blues: Examining the Perceived Impact of Rap Music on Black Women College Students,” Issue No. 10: Open Call (Eds. Carol Stabile, Sarah T. Hamid, and Radhika Gajjala)

  5. Lisa Nakamura (2012), “Queer Female of Color: The Highest Difficulty Setting There Is?” Issue 1: Conversations Across the Field (Eds. Kim Sawchuk and Carol Stabile)

Part 5: Political Interventions

  1. Sky Croeser (2016), “Thinking Beyond ‘Free Speech’ in Responding to Online Harassment,” Issue 10: Open Call, (Eds. Carol Stabile, Sarah T. Hamid, and Radhika Gajjala)

  2. Emilee Eikren and Mary Ingrams-Waters (2016), “Dismantling ‘You Get What You Deserve’: Towards a Feminist Sociology of Revenge Porn,” Issue 10: Open Call (Eds. Carol Stabile, Sarah T. Hamid, and Radhika Gajjala)

  3. Feminist Phone Intervention (2015), “The Voice on the Line: A Reflection on Creating the Feminist Phone Intervention,” Issue 6: Hacking the B/W Binary (Eds. Brittney Cooper and Margaret Rhee)

  4. Wunpini Fatimata Mohammed (2019), “Online Activism: Centering Marginalized Voices in Activist Work,” Issue 15 (Eds. Pallavi Guha, Carol Stabile, and Radhika Gajjala)

  5. Bryce Peake (2015), “WP: THREATENING2MEN: Misogynist Infopolitics and the Hegemony of the Asshole Consensus on English Wikipedia,” Issue 7: Open Call (Eds. Carol Stabile and Radhika Gajjala)

Part 6: Beyond the Gender Binary

  1. Aren Aizura (2017), “Communizing Care in The Left Hand of Darkness,” Issue 12: Radical Speculation and Ursula K. Le Guin (Eds. Alexis Lothian)

  2. Kristin Allukian and Mauro Carassalis (2015), "Rule-guided Expression: Gender and Dissent across Mediated Literary Works," Issue 8: Gender, Globalization and the Digital (Ed. Roopika Risam)

  3. Shehram Mokhtar (2018), “Aurat Raj: Hacking Masculinity & Reimagining Gender in South Asian Cinema,” Issue 13: Radical Feminist Storytelling and Speculative Fiction: Creating new worlds by re-imagining hacking (Eds. Sophie Toupin and Spideralex)

  4. Krista Lynes (2018), “Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Performative Politics and Queer Migration Activisms,” Issue 14: Visualizing Protest: Transnational Approaches to the Aesthetics of Dissent (Eds. Ela Przybylo, Veronika Novoselova, and Sara Rodrigues)

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