Despite persistent gender inequalities, the Public Relations (PR) industry in the UK has historically reflected unease with feminism (Yaxley, 2013; L'Etang, 2015). However, indications of a ‘new feminist visibility’ raise significant questions. Do these feminist moves reflect a blossoming of feminist practice in the PR industry? Or rather, in an occupation that is strongly intertwined with neoliberalism and promotional culture (Miller and Dinan, 2000; Cronin, 2018), is the PR industry emblematic of a highly individualised ‘neoliberal feminism’ (Rottenberg, 2014) and a postfeminist sensibility in which ‘multiple and contradictory ideas’ co-exist? (Gill, 2016: 622). Adopting Edley’s (2000) discourse analysis framework, data drawn from intervi...
In this unconventional article, Sarah Banet-Weiser, Rosalind Gill and Catherine Rottenberg conduct a...
This thesis contributes towards an understanding of how neoliberalism and postfeminism have become ...
Although there is a small body of feminist scholarship that problematizes gender in public relations...
My paper draws on a discourse analysis of interviews with seven senior level female PR professionals...
Gender inequalities in public relations (PR) persist. Industry research within the UK reveals a gend...
Women make up the majority of public relations practitioners, suggesting that the liberal-feminist b...
This article contributes to debates about the value and utility of the notion of postfeminism for a ...
It has been well established that Public Relations is a gendered industry, but the one in which wome...
Within the UK recent research has suggested that a belief in gender equality is becoming increasingl...
Feminisms have gained increasing visibility in the last decade, becoming part of public and media di...
In the last few years feminism has gained spectacular visibility across media and popular culture. ...
Scholarship has pointed to contemporary feminism’s popularity and cultural “luminosity.” While this ...
This article utilizes economies of visibility to interpret how two UK women political leaders’ bodie...
The idea of compiling an edited collection around gender and public relations was seeded at the ‘Rad...
This paper argues that there has been a significant shift in advertising representations of women in...
In this unconventional article, Sarah Banet-Weiser, Rosalind Gill and Catherine Rottenberg conduct a...
This thesis contributes towards an understanding of how neoliberalism and postfeminism have become ...
Although there is a small body of feminist scholarship that problematizes gender in public relations...
My paper draws on a discourse analysis of interviews with seven senior level female PR professionals...
Gender inequalities in public relations (PR) persist. Industry research within the UK reveals a gend...
Women make up the majority of public relations practitioners, suggesting that the liberal-feminist b...
This article contributes to debates about the value and utility of the notion of postfeminism for a ...
It has been well established that Public Relations is a gendered industry, but the one in which wome...
Within the UK recent research has suggested that a belief in gender equality is becoming increasingl...
Feminisms have gained increasing visibility in the last decade, becoming part of public and media di...
In the last few years feminism has gained spectacular visibility across media and popular culture. ...
Scholarship has pointed to contemporary feminism’s popularity and cultural “luminosity.” While this ...
This article utilizes economies of visibility to interpret how two UK women political leaders’ bodie...
The idea of compiling an edited collection around gender and public relations was seeded at the ‘Rad...
This paper argues that there has been a significant shift in advertising representations of women in...
In this unconventional article, Sarah Banet-Weiser, Rosalind Gill and Catherine Rottenberg conduct a...
This thesis contributes towards an understanding of how neoliberalism and postfeminism have become ...
Although there is a small body of feminist scholarship that problematizes gender in public relations...