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Kadın ve Sosyal Medya

Year 2018, Volume: 17 Issue: 2, 563 - 576, 01.04.2018
https://doi.org/10.21547/jss.363932

Abstract

Bu makale, kadınların internette ne ölçüde aktif olduğunu irdelerken, eylemliliğin
kadının özgürleşmesine nasıl bir etkisi olacağı sorusuna yanıt arar.
Gezi´den itibaren artan kadın kullanıcı sayısı ışığında sosyal medyanın Türkiye´de
yeni feminist mücadeledeki vazgeçilmez rolünü irdelemek, bu makalenin temel
hedefidir. Buna bağlı olarak genel anlamda kadın hareketi ve ortak bir küresel
kadın hareketi oluşturmada sosyal medya platformları ne derece etkin olabilir
sorusuna da yanıt aranacaktır. Bunları irdelerken, feminist kuşaklar arasındaki
iletişimin kopukluğu ve kuşaklararası çatışma da kaçınılmaz bir şekilde ele
alınması gereken bir konu olarak karşımıza çıkmaktadır. Günümüzde artık internetin
ve sosyal medya platformlarının ortaya çıkardığı dördüncü dalga feminizmin
varlığı tartışılmaktadır. Hashtag Feminizm olarak da tanımlanan feminizmin
1990’lardan itibaren içinde bulunduğumuz döneminde, kadın ve toplumsal cinsiyet
alanında internet ve sanal ağlardaki aktivizm,
bazı olumsuz ya da düşündürücü yönlerine karşın vazgeçilmez bir araç
oluşturmaktadır.

References

  • Budgeon, S. (2011). Third Wave Feminism and the Politics of Gender in Late Modernity. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Coleman, J. (2009). An introduction to feminisms in a postfeminist age. Women's Studies Journal, 23 (2), 3-13.
  • Goldberg, M. (2014). Feminism’s toxic Twitter wars: empowered by social media, feminists are calling one another out for ideological offenses. Is it good for the movement? And whose movement is it? Nation, January 29 https://www.thenation.com/article/feminisms-toxic-twitter-wars/
  • Harris, A. (2010). Mind the gap. Attitudes and emergent feminist politics since the Third Wave. Australian Feminist Studies, 25 (66), 475-484.
  • Henry, A. (2015). From a mindset to a movement: feminism since 1990. In , Dorothy Sue Cobble, Linda Gordon & Astrid Henry (Eds), Feminism Unfinished: A Short,
  • Surprising History of American Women’s Movements. 147-220: New York: W.W. Norton & Campany Ltd.
  • Kaya, Ş. (2016). Yeni Türkiye’de kadın. In İ. Kaya (Eds), Yeni Türkiye’nin Toplumsal Yapısı Ankara: İmge.
  • Kinser, A. E. (2004). Negotiating spaces for/through third-wave feminism. Feminist Formations, 16 (3), 124-153.
  • Mann, S. A., & Huffman, D. J. (2005). The decentering of second wave feminism and the rise of the third wave. Science & Society, 69 (1), 56-91.
  • Monahan-Martin, J. (2005). “Internet abuse? addiction? disorder? symptom? alternative explanations”, Social Science Computer Review, 23 (1): 39-48.
  • Schuster, J. (2013). “Invisible feminists? social media and young women’s political participation, Political Science, 65 (1): 8-24.
  • Scharff, C. (2011). It is a colour thing and a status thing, rather than a gender thing’: negotiating difference in talk about feminism. Feminism & Psychology, 21 (4): 458- 476.
  • Sutton, J., S. Pollock. (2004). Online Activism for Women's Rights. Cyber Psychology & Behavior, 3 (5): 699-706.
  • TÜİK 2015 http://www.tuik.gov.tr/PreHaberBultenleri.do?id=18660
  • TÜİK 2016 http://www.tuik.gov.tr/HbPrint.do?id=21779
  • https://www.cnnturk.com/2013/bilim.teknoloji/sosyal.medya/02/13/iste.twitter.turkiye.istatistikleri/696288.0/index.html
  • https://wearesocial.com/special-reports/digital-in-2017-global-overview

Women and Social Media

Year 2018, Volume: 17 Issue: 2, 563 - 576, 01.04.2018
https://doi.org/10.21547/jss.363932

Abstract

This article examines what extent women are active on the Internet, while it searches for an answer to the question of how their activeness could affect the women emancipation. The main goal of this article is to understand the social media’s role in the feminist struggle of Turkey in the light of the increasing number of female social media users since the Gezi movement. In relation to this, this article searches for an answer to the question   to what extent social media platforms could be influential in women’s movement in general as well as in constructing global feminist movement. Discussing these issues brings the communication gap between feminist generations and intergenerational conflicts as questions to be addressed. Today, the existence of fourth wave feminism emerged as a result of social media platforms is discussed. For this feminism, which is also called Hashtag Feminism we have been living in since 1990s, activism in cyber space is an indispensable tool, even though it has some negative and debatable sides. 

References

  • Budgeon, S. (2011). Third Wave Feminism and the Politics of Gender in Late Modernity. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Coleman, J. (2009). An introduction to feminisms in a postfeminist age. Women's Studies Journal, 23 (2), 3-13.
  • Goldberg, M. (2014). Feminism’s toxic Twitter wars: empowered by social media, feminists are calling one another out for ideological offenses. Is it good for the movement? And whose movement is it? Nation, January 29 https://www.thenation.com/article/feminisms-toxic-twitter-wars/
  • Harris, A. (2010). Mind the gap. Attitudes and emergent feminist politics since the Third Wave. Australian Feminist Studies, 25 (66), 475-484.
  • Henry, A. (2015). From a mindset to a movement: feminism since 1990. In , Dorothy Sue Cobble, Linda Gordon & Astrid Henry (Eds), Feminism Unfinished: A Short,
  • Surprising History of American Women’s Movements. 147-220: New York: W.W. Norton & Campany Ltd.
  • Kaya, Ş. (2016). Yeni Türkiye’de kadın. In İ. Kaya (Eds), Yeni Türkiye’nin Toplumsal Yapısı Ankara: İmge.
  • Kinser, A. E. (2004). Negotiating spaces for/through third-wave feminism. Feminist Formations, 16 (3), 124-153.
  • Mann, S. A., & Huffman, D. J. (2005). The decentering of second wave feminism and the rise of the third wave. Science & Society, 69 (1), 56-91.
  • Monahan-Martin, J. (2005). “Internet abuse? addiction? disorder? symptom? alternative explanations”, Social Science Computer Review, 23 (1): 39-48.
  • Schuster, J. (2013). “Invisible feminists? social media and young women’s political participation, Political Science, 65 (1): 8-24.
  • Scharff, C. (2011). It is a colour thing and a status thing, rather than a gender thing’: negotiating difference in talk about feminism. Feminism & Psychology, 21 (4): 458- 476.
  • Sutton, J., S. Pollock. (2004). Online Activism for Women's Rights. Cyber Psychology & Behavior, 3 (5): 699-706.
  • TÜİK 2015 http://www.tuik.gov.tr/PreHaberBultenleri.do?id=18660
  • TÜİK 2016 http://www.tuik.gov.tr/HbPrint.do?id=21779
  • https://www.cnnturk.com/2013/bilim.teknoloji/sosyal.medya/02/13/iste.twitter.turkiye.istatistikleri/696288.0/index.html
  • https://wearesocial.com/special-reports/digital-in-2017-global-overview
There are 17 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language Turkish
Subjects Sociology
Journal Section Sociology
Authors

Şehriban Kaya

Publication Date April 1, 2018
Submission Date December 11, 2017
Acceptance Date March 28, 2018
Published in Issue Year 2018 Volume: 17 Issue: 2

Cite

APA Kaya, Ş. (2018). Kadın ve Sosyal Medya. Gaziantep University Journal of Social Sciences, 17(2), 563-576. https://doi.org/10.21547/jss.363932

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