The Oxford Handbook of Media and Social Justice
The Oxford Handbook of Media and Social Justice
Srividya Ramasubramanian (PhD, Penn State University) is Newhouse Professor & Endowed Chair at Syracuse University. She is widely recognized for her pioneering work on data justice, critical media effects, media literacy, and anti-racism dialogues. With Erica Scharrer, she has co-authored Quantitative Research Methods in Communication: The Power of Numbers for Social Justice (Routledge, 2021). She is the editor of Communication Monographs and the Director of CODE^SHIFT (Collaboratory for Data Equity, Social Healing, Inclusive Futures, and Transformation).
Omotayo O. Banjo (PhD, Pennsylvania State University) is a Professor in the School of Communication, Film, & Media Studies as well as Associate Dean of the Grad College at the University of Cincinnati. Her work focuses on African diasporic entertainment, identity, and belonging. She is a critical media effects scholar who has used different methodologies from textual analysis of post-racial entertainment media to transnational audience reception research and co-viewing effects. She is a McNair alum, a Fulbright award winner, and engaged scholar, having presented her work to policymakers and tech experts.
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Abstract
The urgency and complexity of contemporary social justice issues facing the world today mean that activists, scholars, and storytellers need a readily available compendium of cutting-edge scholarship on media and social justice. This handbook represents the collective wisdom of more than 40 leading voices across positionalities and perspectives, geographies and generations, meta-theories and methods, and issues and identities. Each of the 32 chapters presents a state-of-the-art systematic overview of a brief history, key concepts, contemporary debates and dialogues, and future directions. The book begins with introductory remarks on perspectives, positionalities, and paradigms. The section on approaches and analytical frameworks examines classic and contemporary media theories related to social justice such as political economy, critical cultural studies, reception studies, and framing analyses. The next section on methods and meaning-making reviews methodological tools such as quantitative criticalism, media ethnography, and critical discourse analysis for media justice researchers. These theories and methods are then applied to specific intersectional identities, contemporary social issues, and communities worldwide in the next section: “Resistance and Revisioning. The book concludes with reflections on resistances, reckoning, and reparative justice.
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Front Matter
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Section I Introduction
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Section II Approaches and Analytic Frameworks
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2
Political Economy of Communication in the Digital Platform Era
Dal Yong Jin
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3
The Limits of Diversity and Popular Anti-Racism: The Need for Reparative Justice in the Cultural Industries
Anamik Saha
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4
Critical Media Effects Framework: Bridging Critical Cultural Communication with Media Effects Through Power, Intersectionality, Context, and Agency
Srividya Ramasubramanian andOmotayo O. Banjo
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5
Black Audiences and Media Resistance
David Stamps
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6
“How Do You Shift That?” Dialoguing Social Justice, Activism, and Black Joy in Media Studies
jas l. Moultrie andRalina L. Joseph
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7
Latine Media Studies: From Near Omission to Radical Intersectionality
Angharad N. Valdivia
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8
Queer of Color Approaches to Critical Cultural Media Studies
Keisuke Kimura andShinsuke Eguchi
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9
Queer and Transgender Media Studies
Erique Zhang andThomas J Billard
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10
Digital Religion and the Negotiation of Gender/Sex Norms
Ruth Tsuria
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11
Critical Disability Media Studies
Katie Ellis andJessica Keeley
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2
Political Economy of Communication in the Digital Platform Era
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Section III Methods and Meaning-Making
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12
Critical Discourse Analysis
Marissa Joanna Doshi
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13
Data Justice: The Role of Data in Media and Social Justice
Srividya Ramasubramanian and others
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14
Justice Informatics, Justice for Us All: Liberation from Techno-Ideology
Jasmina Tacheva andTanya Loughead
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15
Researching Closed Fields: What We Can Learn from Analyzing So-Called Constrained, Inaccessible, and Invisible Media Contexts
Hanan Badr
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16
Digital Archives and Unexpected Crossings: A Data Feminist Approach to Transnational Feminist Media Studies and Social Media Activism
Ololade Faniyi andRadhika Gajjala
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12
Critical Discourse Analysis
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Section IV Resistance and Revisioning
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17
Mediated Socioeconomic Injustice: Representations of Poor and Working-Class People in Mainstream Media
Charisse L’Pree Corsbie-Massay
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18
Challenging Caste Hierarchies in Tamil Cinema
Swarnavel Eswaran
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19
Media Representations, Incarceration, and Social Justice
Adam Key
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20
Heroes of the Border: Using Counternarratives to Break Border Stereotypes and Create Superhero Narratives
Anthony R. Ramirez
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21
Media Creation and Consumption as Activism Among African Transnational and Diasporic Communities
Omotayo O. Banjo andTomide Oloruntobi
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22
Subaltern Digital Cultures: Precarious Migrants on TikTok
Elisha Lim and others
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23
Media and Mental Health Interventions Among Migrants: Addressing the Disparities
Rukhsana Ahmed andSeulgi Park
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24
Health Media Activism: Latin American Organizing in Response to Feminicides
Leandra Hinojosa Hernández
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25
Using Artificial Intelligence to Address Health Disparities: Challenges and Solutions
Kelly Merrill
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26
Pedagogies of Resistance: Social Movements and the Construction of Communicative Knowledge in Brazil
Paola Sartoretto
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27
Emboldening Democratic Pedagogies About Media and Justice Through Critical Media Literacy and Peer Teaching
Andrea Gambino andJeff Share
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28
Alternative Cultures of Resistance and Collective Organizing in the Platform Economy
Cheryll Ruth R. Soriano
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29
LGBT Activism, Social Media, and the Politics of Queer Visibility in Ghana
Godfried A. Asante and others
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30
Indigenous Environmental Media Activism in South Asia
Uttaran Dutta
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31
Indigenous Media Organizing
Mohan J. Dutta andChristine Ngā Hau Elers
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17
Mediated Socioeconomic Injustice: Representations of Poor and Working-Class People in Mainstream Media
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Section V Conclusion
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End Matter
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