AmponsahE-L (2021) Black women in and beyond Belgian mainstream media: Between opinion–making, dissidence, and marronage. Feminist Media Studies21(8): 1285–1301.
2.
BaileyM (2021) Misogynoir Transformed: Black Women’s Digital Resistance. New York, NY: New York University Press.
3.
BailyMTrudy (2018) On misogynoir: Citation, erasure, and plagiarism. Feminist Media Studies18(4): 762–768.
4.
BrockAJr (2020) Distributed Blackness: African American Cybercultures. New York, NY: New York University Press.
5.
brucekWalcottRKihoro MackayKOseiK, et al. (2021) Black feminist and digital media studies in Britain. Feminist Media Studies21(8): 1302–1321.
6.
ClarkMD (2014) To tweet our own cause: A mixed-methods study of the online phenomenon ‘Black Twitter’. PhD Thesis, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School, Chapel Hill, NC.
7.
EmejuluASobandeF (eds) (2019) To Exist Is to Resist: Black Feminism in Europe. London: Pluto Press.
JohnsonA (2017) Getting comfortable to feel at home: Clothing practices of Black Muslim women in Britain. Gender, Place & Culture24(2): 274–287.
13.
Kennedy-MacfoyMZarkovD (2020) Black lives matter in Europe – EJWS special open forum: Introduction. European Journal of Women’s Studies30(1): 3S–5S.
14.
Kihoro MackayK (2021) ‘Got on to the plane as white English and landed in London as Black, Kenyan’. Construction and performance of Kenyanness across online and offline Sites. Doctoral Thesis, Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham.
Knight-SteeleC (2021) Digital Black Feminism. New York, NY: New York University Press.
17.
LewisG (2011a) The ‘Europe’ of the European journal of women’s studies: Editorial. European Journal of Women’s Studies18(1): 3–6.
18.
LewisG (2011b) Where is it we are then? Navigations of the multiple times and spaces of gendered Europe. European Journal of Women’s Studies18(3): 211–213.
19.
LewisG (2017) Questions of presence. Feminist Review117(1): 1–19.
20.
Peterson-SalahuddinC (2022) Posting back: Exploring platformed Black feminist communities on Twitter and Instagram. Social Media + Society22: 1–13.
21.
SobandeF (2020) The Digital Lives of Black Women in Britain. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.
22.
SobandeFBasuM (2023) ‘Beyond BAME, WOC, and “political blackness”’: Diasporic digital communing practices. Communication, Culture and Critique16: 91–98.
23.
WalcottR (2023) A tweet at the table: Black British identity expression on social media. PhD Thesis, King’s College London, London.