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[Commlist] New book: From Fritzl to #metoo: Twelve years of rape coverage in the British press
Thu Apr 20 12:49:44 GMT 2023
Alessia Tranchese is really pleased to share the news that my research
on the representation of sexual violence has finally been published in a
book: *From Fritzl to #metoo: Twelve years of rape coverage in the
British press
<https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-031-09353-1>* (Palgrave
Macmillan). The book is part of the Palgrave Studies in Language, Gender
and Sexuality. If you're interested in knowing more, I've added a short
summary, table of contents, and reviews below.
Please feel free to get in touch with me ((alessia.tranchese /at/ port.ac.uk)
<mailto:(alessia.tranchese /at/ port.ac.uk)>) if you want to know more about it
and kindly forward it to anyone who might be interested.
*About the book*
This book provides a much-needed longitudinal analysis of the language
used by the British press to talk about sexual violence. Through a
diachronic analysis informed by corpus linguistics and feminist theory,
the book examines how rape discourse has (or has not) changed over the
past decade, and it explores how age-old myths about sexual violence
re-emerge in different forms within news narratives. Against the
backdrop of twelve years of newspaper coverage of rape, including many
high-profile cases, this study also traces the rise of “celebrity
culture”, the emergence of #metoo, and the development of the backlash
against it. The historical events and media trends covered in this book
are placed within broader debates on feminism and the role played by
(social) media in shaping contemporary rape discourse.
More information about the author is available here
<https://www.port.ac.uk/about-us/structure-and-governance/our-people/our-staff/alessia-tranchese>.
*Table of Contents*
*
*
*Introduction*
1. Not Another Book About Male Violence Against Women!
*Setting the Scene*
2. Defining the field
3. Method, Context, and Data
*At the Surface*
4. The Different Names of Sexual Violence
5. Sexual Violence Across Time
*Delving Deeper*
6. It’s Not just Semantics
7. Emerging Patterns
8. Disappearing Patterns
*Before and After*
9.Does Rape Attract Murder?
10. #metoo: The Good, the Bad, and the Backlash
11. From Fritzl to #metoo: What Has Changed?
12. CONCLUSION Joining the Dots
*Reviews*
“An important, rigorous and very readable book which will be an
essential point of reference for future studies of sexual violence in
the news. Tranchese demonstrates which myths about rape have persisted,
as well as highlighting how they have adapted to the digital news
environment. Her analysis is clear and persuasive and provides activists
with new tools and evidence to push for change. This is feminist media
studies at its best. I cannot recommend this book highly enough.”
*Karen Boyle*, Author #MeToo, Weinstein and Feminism, University of
Strathclyde
“This book is essential reading for anyone who really wants to
understand how the myths and stereotypes around rape are moulded and
sustained by the British media, distracting from the profound structural
changes required to dismantle misogyny and deliver real justice for
women, too often denied by the courts.”
*Yvonne Roberts*, journalist and campaigner
“This analysis of what changed, and what didn’t, in British press
coverage of sexual violence against women between 2009 and 2019 is a
valuable and much needed contribution to our understanding of a
pervasive social problem. Tranchese shows how the media’s choices about
what to report and how contribute to that problem, and how recent
developments like the rise of online media consumption and the
‘celebrification’ of news have made things worse. It’s a sobering but
necessary read, which will be welcomed by linguists and other social
scientists researching violence against women, media discourse or both.”
*Deborah Cameron*, Professor of Language and Communication, University
of Oxford, UK
“A fascinating analysis of linguistic and discursive patterns
surrounding press reporting of sexual violence towards women both before
and during the #MeToo era.”
*Paul Baker*, Professor of Linguistics and English Language at Lancaster
University, UK
“An exceptionally well-researched account of how the British media have
represented sexual violence over the past two decades. Through in-depth
discourse analysis, Tranchese powerfully charts the mythologies embedded
in press coverage of men’s sexual violence against women, and details
how these contribute to the social conditions that make such violence
possible.”
*Dr. Fiona Vera-Gray*, Deputy Director of the Child and Woman Abuse
Studies Unit at London Metropolitan University, UK
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