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Published in 2018 at "Women's Studies International Forum"
DOI: 10.1016/j.wsif.2018.04.008
Abstract: Abstract The first US Women's March on January 21, 2017 seemingly had the potential to unite women across race. To assess the progress of feminism towards an increasingly intersectional feminist approach, the authors collected and…
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Keywords:
feminism women;
feminism;
intersectional feminism;
women march ... See more keywords
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Published in 2019 at "Women's Studies in Communication"
DOI: 10.1080/07491409.2019.1616021
Abstract: Abstract This article engages with theories of intersectionality, affect, and emotion, which often have been separated in scholarship on social movements, to understand the participation of diverse voices in the Women’s March on Washington and…
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Keywords:
unity processes;
intersectionality dis;
intersectionality;
women march ... See more keywords
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Published in 2022 at "Sociological Perspectives"
DOI: 10.1177/07311214221080991
Abstract: This paper explores collective identity building in a feminist online community that in 2018 organized the largest women’s march in South Korean history. Drawing on qualitative and quantitative content analyses of the community’s bulletin boards,…
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Keywords:
women march;
identity;
identity building;
community ... See more keywords
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Published in 2018 at "Leadership"
DOI: 10.1177/1742715018809497
Abstract: The Women’s March is arguably the most important counter-narrative to Trump’s post-truth regime, but does it also present a leadership alternative to his populist and authoritarian style? And is this alternative necessarily better than currently…
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Keywords:
leadership;
collaboration contestation;
women march;
together rise ... See more keywords