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The personal is political: articulating women's citizenship through three African feminist blogs

Mediated public spaces both on and offline privilege the educated male elite, and thus cannot address the specific needs of women (Huyer and Sikoska, 2003:2), or their points of view. This study aimed to explore the extent to which three African feminist blogs realise the democratising potential of...

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Main Author: Carelse, Aimee
Other Authors: Evans, Martha
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Centre for Film and Media Studies 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Carelse, Aimee
author2 Evans, Martha
author_browse Carelse, Aimee
Evans, Martha
author_facet Evans, Martha
Carelse, Aimee
author_sort Carelse, Aimee
collection Thesis
description Mediated public spaces both on and offline privilege the educated male elite, and thus cannot address the specific needs of women (Huyer and Sikoska, 2003:2), or their points of view. This study aimed to explore the extent to which three African feminist blogs realise the democratising potential of the blogosphere as well as the ways in which they articulate the concerns and perspectives of women whose vantage points are often silenced by mainstream discourses of citizenship. As a specifically gendered platform within a feminist public sphere, these blogs offer insight into the fluidity of the private/public dichotomy in online media spaces, and how this determines particular discourses of citizenship both on and offline. Using a qualitative-quantitative content analysis of 45 blog posts across three African feminist blogs (Adventures from the Bedrooms of African Women, Her Zimbabwe, and MsAfropolitan) during July and August 2016, this study investigated how women's engagement with feminist issues is enabled by alternative online media spaces, and in what ways blogs offer African women a relatively democratic space for sharing and discussion. Through an analysis of blog content, the study revealed that contributors deploy particular communicative strategies such as first-person narration, reflection of personal experience in relation to broader social, economic and political issues, and a confessional intimacy that altogether prioritise women's voices and personal lived realities. The topics discussed in the content of blogs cut across public and private life, testifying to a need to move away from ideological conceptualisations of public engagement that delegitimise women's participation in the public sphere. It also makes a case for the reconsideration of the terms "public" and "politics" and what counts as both in a technologically dynamic society in which marginalised groups are continuing to explore alternative avenues for communication and self-expression.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:38.153Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/24893 The personal is political: articulating women's citizenship through three African feminist blogs Carelse, Aimee Evans, Martha Media Theory and Practice Mediated public spaces both on and offline privilege the educated male elite, and thus cannot address the specific needs of women (Huyer and Sikoska, 2003:2), or their points of view. This study aimed to explore the extent to which three African feminist blogs realise the democratising potential of the blogosphere as well as the ways in which they articulate the concerns and perspectives of women whose vantage points are often silenced by mainstream discourses of citizenship. As a specifically gendered platform within a feminist public sphere, these blogs offer insight into the fluidity of the private/public dichotomy in online media spaces, and how this determines particular discourses of citizenship both on and offline. Using a qualitative-quantitative content analysis of 45 blog posts across three African feminist blogs (Adventures from the Bedrooms of African Women, Her Zimbabwe, and MsAfropolitan) during July and August 2016, this study investigated how women's engagement with feminist issues is enabled by alternative online media spaces, and in what ways blogs offer African women a relatively democratic space for sharing and discussion. Through an analysis of blog content, the study revealed that contributors deploy particular communicative strategies such as first-person narration, reflection of personal experience in relation to broader social, economic and political issues, and a confessional intimacy that altogether prioritise women's voices and personal lived realities. The topics discussed in the content of blogs cut across public and private life, testifying to a need to move away from ideological conceptualisations of public engagement that delegitimise women's participation in the public sphere. It also makes a case for the reconsideration of the terms "public" and "politics" and what counts as both in a technologically dynamic society in which marginalised groups are continuing to explore alternative avenues for communication and self-expression. 2017-08-17T14:18:20Z 2017-08-17T14:18:20Z 2017 Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/24893 eng application/pdf Centre for Film and Media Studies Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Media Theory and Practice
Carelse, Aimee
The personal is political: articulating women's citizenship through three African feminist blogs
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The personal is political: articulating women's citizenship through three African feminist blogs
title_full The personal is political: articulating women's citizenship through three African feminist blogs
title_fullStr The personal is political: articulating women's citizenship through three African feminist blogs
title_full_unstemmed The personal is political: articulating women's citizenship through three African feminist blogs
title_short The personal is political: articulating women's citizenship through three African feminist blogs
title_sort personal is political articulating women s citizenship through three african feminist blogs
topic Media Theory and Practice
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/24893
work_keys_str_mv AT carelseaimee thepersonalispoliticalarticulatingwomenscitizenshipthroughthreeafricanfeministblogs
AT carelseaimee personalispoliticalarticulatingwomenscitizenshipthroughthreeafricanfeministblogs