BoyntonP. (2012) Getting the press we deserve: Opportunities and challenges for innovative media practice. Feminism & Psychology22(4): 536–540.
4.
BraunV. (2011) Petting a snake? Reflections on feminist critique, media engagement and ‘making a difference’. Feminism & Psychology22(4): 528–535.
5.
CrossleyA. (2015) Facebook Feminism: Social Media, Blogs, and New Technologies of Contemporary U.S. Feminism. Mobilization: An International Quarterly20: 253–268.
6.
Guillard, J. (2016). Is feminism trending? Pedagogical approaches to countering (Sl)activism. Gender and Education, 28(5), 609–626.
7.
EagleR. B. (2015) Loitering, lingering, hashtagging: Women reclaiming public space via #BoardtheBus, #StopStreetHarassment, and the #Everydaysexism Project. Feminist Media Studies15: 349–353.
8.
EarlJ.KimportK. (2011) Digitally enabled social change: Activism in the Internet age, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
9.
FotopoulouA. (2016) Digital and networked by default? Women’s organisations and the social imaginary of networked feminism. New Media and Society18(6): 989–1005.
10.
HuttonF.GriffinC.LyonsA.NilandP.McCreanorT. (2016) “Tragic girls” and “crack whores”: Alcohol, femininity and Facebook. Feminism & Psychology26(1): 73–93.
KristoffersonK.WhiteK.PelozaJ. (2014) The nature of slacktivism: How the social observability of an initial act of token support impacts subsequent prosocial action. Journal of Consumer Research40: 1149–1166.
14.
ManagoA. M. (2013) Negotiating a sexy masculinity on social networking sites. Feminism & Psychology23(4): 478–497.
15.
SchusterJ. (2013) Invisible feminists? Social media and young women’s political participation. Political Science65: 8–24.