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This book explores the increasing imperatives to speak up, to speak out, and to find ones voice in contemporary media culture. It considers how, for women in particular, this seems to constitute a radical break with the historical idealization of silence and demureness. However, the author argues that there is a growing and pernicious gap between the seductive promise of voice, and voice as it actually exists. While brutal instruments such as the ducking stool and scolds bridle are no longer in use to punish womens speech, Kay proposes that communicative injustice now operates in much more insidious ways. The wide-ranging chapters explore the mediated voices of women such as Monica Lewinsky, Hannah Gadsby, Diane Abbott, and Yassmin Abdel-Magied, as well as the problems and possibilities of gossip, nagging, and the traumatised voice in television talk shows. It critiques the optimistic claims about the unleashing of womens voices post-#MeToo and examines the ways that womens speech continues to be trivialized and devalued. Communicative justice, the author argues, is not about empowering individuals to find their voice, but about collectively transforming the whole communicative terrain.
- Format: Pocket/Paperback
- ISBN: 9783030472894
- Språk: Engelska
- Antal sidor: 193
- Utgivningsdatum: 2021-07-22
- Förlag: Springer Nature Switzerland AG