Gender and memory in the globital age
In: Palgrave Macmillan Memory Studies
"Dedication" -- "Preface: The Feminist Mnemologist" -- "Acknowledgements" -- "Contents" -- "List of Tables" -- "chapter 1: Introduction" -- "Book Rationale" -- "Book Scope" -- "Research Methods" -- "Book Content" -- "Part I: Concepts" -- "Part II: Domains" -- "Part III: Actions" -- "Key Terms" -- "Part I: Concepts" -- "chapter 2: Gender, Memory and Technologies" -- "Memory Technologies in Early Feminism" -- "Memory Technologies in 20th-Century Feminism" -- "Gender and Memory Technologies in Memory Studies" -- "New Paradigms in Memory Studies" -- "Notes" -- "chapter 3: Globital Memory" -- "Movement and Fixity" -- "Towards the Globital: Globalisation Plus Digitisation" -- "Globital Memory: Concept" -- "Globital Memory: Method" -- "(Trans)Mediality" -- "(Trans)Modality" -- "Extensity" -- "Velocity" -- "Valency" -- "Viscosity" -- "Notes" -- "chapter 4: Globital Utopias: Imaginaries of Gender, Memory and New Technologies" -- "Utopia as Method" -- "Gender, Memory and the Press" -- "Gender, Memory and the Screen" -- "Mobilising Feminist Memories" -- "Conclusion" -- "Notes" -- "Part II: Domains" -- "chapter 5: Globital Body: Birth" -- "Defining Obstetric Sonography" -- "Gender and Sonography" -- "Pre-Natal Erasure and Forgetting" -- "From Personal to Public Memory" -- "From Private Loss to Public Memorial" -- "Trajectories of the Globital Memory Baby" -- "Conclusions" -- "chapter 6: Globital Home: Life" -- "In William Shakespeare's Othello, Iago declares, 'I will wear my heart upon my sleeve/For daws to peck at: I am not what I am.' In one of the interviews I conducted for this book, a young woman declared that her favourite memory on her mobi" -- "Historical and Social Context of the Mobile Phone" -- "The Local and the Global" -- "Theories of Gender and Mobile Phone Use" -- "Gender, Memory and the Mobile Phone".