In her new book Gajjala addresses the political, economic, and cultural ramifications of the explosion of Internet communication. She has developed a cyberethnography_based on case studies with email discussion lists such as the South Asian Women's list, the third-world-women list, the women-writing-culture list and the sa-cyborgs list_which examines the issues these lists raise regarding discursive production within an intellectual power field. This book will be a valuable reference for those with an interest in ethnographic methods, cultural studies, feminist studies, and new technologies.
Radhika Gajjala is associate professor of Communication Studies at Bowling Green State University.
Table of Contents
Part 1 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Part 2 PROLOGUE: I REFUSE TO BE READ Part 3 INTRODUCTION Part 4 PART I: Cyborg-Diaspora to the SAWnet Refusal Chapter 5 Chapter One: Imagining Virtual Community and Dialogic Encounters Chapter 6 Chapter Two: The SAWnet Refusal Chapter 7 Chapter Three: Feminist Ethnography, Feminist Media Studies, and Internet Research Part 8 PART II: Building (South Asian) Cyberfeminist Webs? Chapter 9 Chapter Four: Interrogating Identities: Composing Other Cyberspaces Chapter 10 Chapter Five: Building Cyberfeminist Webs Part 11 PART III: Cyberfeminism and the "third-world"-Dialogues Chapter 12 Chapter Six: Cyberfeminism, technology, and international "development" Chapter 13 Chapter Seven: Carving dis-appearing analogue/digital "selves" Part 14 EPILOGUE: I WANT TO CURL UP AND DENY YOU Part 15 REFERENCES Part 16 ABOUT THE AUTHOR