Gwendolyn Beetham and Jessica Valenti, "Introduction" (Page 2 of 4)
So what's feminist about blogging?
Although not all blogs by women are considered "feminist," nor are
all feminist blogs written by women,[12]
the blogosphere is a
useful—and necessary—source for feminists both because it allows us to
get our perspectives out in public forums, and also because it's a
medium easily adaptable to feminist causes. In the article "An
Independent Media Center of One's Own," the creators of the Independent
Media Center (or Indymedia) note that the open publishing forum offered
by Indymedia news Web sites—and also by blogs—embodies feminist values
in several ways: it opens up the media-making process to multiple
progressive voices; it flattens the hierarchy that exists whenever news
is presented as the "active" product separate from the "passive"
audience; and it claims not to represent "the monolithic truth but an
assembly of many people's views."[13]
In addition to the feminist nature of blogs themselves, contemporary
globalization has made the Internet—and blogs in particular—a valuable
way for feminists to communicate through and beyond various divides.
According to one of our contributors, Gillian Youngs, contemporary
feminism, using what's known as "cyberfeminism," has been successful in
using virtual networks which "cross not only the boundaries of nations
and cultures and public and private spheres . . . [but] traditional divisions
within them such as state and market, civil and commercial society,
profit and non-profit, institutional and personal." The term
cyberfeminism itself is defined as "a diverse range of practices and
discourses all generically identifiable by their commitment to exploring
non-oppressive alternatives to existing relations of power through
manipulation of information technologies."[14]
Importantly for
the blogging context, cyberfeminists are described as women "for whom
information technology, and in particular the Internet, has become a
central part of their everyday, lived feminist
politics."[15]
For younger feminists who grew up using the Internet in their daily
lives, then, it's a way to turn the personal into the political in what
contributor Tracy Kennedy refers to as "feminist virtual
consciousness-raising."
Without doubt, the cyberfeminism taking place in the blogosphere has
broadened the scope of public feminist dialogue and the reach of
progressive feminist politics. In setting out to "challenge the
male-centered culture of the Internet and to imprint their own models of
open and accessible . . . communication onto the new technologies,"
these technologically savvy feminists have found a way to introduce new
voices and new strategies into age-old feminist debates.[16]
Ideally a powerful communication tool for feminists from Arkansas to
Albania, the Internet promises a more open and democratic arena for
debate and action, many aspects of which are explored in this edition.
That said, there remain serious racial, economic, and even gender
gaps—explored in the "where are the women" conversations—in the actual
use of the Internet in general[17]
and the blogosphere in
particular. We must ask, then, Whose voices are we hearing through this
medium, and why?
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