Description

Book Synopsis
Why are women so frequently targeted with hate speech online and what can we do about it? Psychological explanations for the problem of woman-hating overlook important features of our social world that encourage latent feelings of hostility toward women, even despite our consciously-held ideals of equality. Louise Richardson-Self investigates the woman-hostile norms of the English-speaking internet, the ‘rules’ of engagement in these social spaces, and the narratives we tell ourselves about who gets to inhabit such spaces. It examines the dominant imaginings (images, impressions, stereotypes, and ideas) of women that are shared in acts of hate speech, highlighting their ‘emotional stickiness’. But offering strategies through which we may reimagine our norms of online engagement, the stories that justify those norms, and the logic that makes sense of it all, this book shows how we can create alternative visions of what it means to take up online space as a woman and to ensure that women are seen as entitled to be there. By exploring aspects of ‘social imaginaries’ theory and applying it to the problem of hate speech against women online, this book illuminates why woman-hating has become such a prominent feature of this environment and how we can make these spaces safer for women.


Trade Review

This book is a superb analysis of the urgent matter of online hate speech, particularly online misogyny. It asks the questions: what does such the speech do, who does it do it to, and how can it be countered? Richardson-Self approaches this through the framework of the social imaginary and articulates the damaging ,and often pre-reflective, imaginaries which both enable such speech and which it reinforces and reproduces. She convincingly demonstrates that such practices of abuse damage groups and not just individuals and explores the range of strategies, legal and other which can be employed to counter such damage. This includes the search for counter imaginings which can take affective hold. There are no easy solutions but we all need this book to get clear exactly what is at issue and to creatively inform our pathways of resistance. This is sophisticated philosophical analysis applied in an exemplary way to one of the key issues of our times.

-- Kathleen Lennon, , professor emerita of philosophy at the University of Hull

Table of Contents

Introduction: Hate Speech Against Women Online

Chapter 1: Social Imaginaries and Imagined Subjects

Chapter 2: Sexual Imaginaries

Chapter 3: Conceptualising Hate Speech

Chapter 4: Analysing Hate Speech Against Women Online

Chapter 5: Countermeasures Against Online Hate Speech

Chapter 6: Challenging Images of Cyberspace

Conclusion: Imaginal (R)Evolution

Hate Speech against Women Online: Concepts and

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    A Hardback by Louise Richardson-Self

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      View other formats and editions of Hate Speech against Women Online: Concepts and by Louise Richardson-Self

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 01/10/2021
      ISBN13: 9781538147795, 978-1538147795
      ISBN10: 1538147793

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Why are women so frequently targeted with hate speech online and what can we do about it? Psychological explanations for the problem of woman-hating overlook important features of our social world that encourage latent feelings of hostility toward women, even despite our consciously-held ideals of equality. Louise Richardson-Self investigates the woman-hostile norms of the English-speaking internet, the ‘rules’ of engagement in these social spaces, and the narratives we tell ourselves about who gets to inhabit such spaces. It examines the dominant imaginings (images, impressions, stereotypes, and ideas) of women that are shared in acts of hate speech, highlighting their ‘emotional stickiness’. But offering strategies through which we may reimagine our norms of online engagement, the stories that justify those norms, and the logic that makes sense of it all, this book shows how we can create alternative visions of what it means to take up online space as a woman and to ensure that women are seen as entitled to be there. By exploring aspects of ‘social imaginaries’ theory and applying it to the problem of hate speech against women online, this book illuminates why woman-hating has become such a prominent feature of this environment and how we can make these spaces safer for women.


      Trade Review

      This book is a superb analysis of the urgent matter of online hate speech, particularly online misogyny. It asks the questions: what does such the speech do, who does it do it to, and how can it be countered? Richardson-Self approaches this through the framework of the social imaginary and articulates the damaging ,and often pre-reflective, imaginaries which both enable such speech and which it reinforces and reproduces. She convincingly demonstrates that such practices of abuse damage groups and not just individuals and explores the range of strategies, legal and other which can be employed to counter such damage. This includes the search for counter imaginings which can take affective hold. There are no easy solutions but we all need this book to get clear exactly what is at issue and to creatively inform our pathways of resistance. This is sophisticated philosophical analysis applied in an exemplary way to one of the key issues of our times.

      -- Kathleen Lennon, , professor emerita of philosophy at the University of Hull

      Table of Contents

      Introduction: Hate Speech Against Women Online

      Chapter 1: Social Imaginaries and Imagined Subjects

      Chapter 2: Sexual Imaginaries

      Chapter 3: Conceptualising Hate Speech

      Chapter 4: Analysing Hate Speech Against Women Online

      Chapter 5: Countermeasures Against Online Hate Speech

      Chapter 6: Challenging Images of Cyberspace

      Conclusion: Imaginal (R)Evolution

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