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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Kutlwano B. L. MokgwathiPublisher: Vernon Art and Science Inc. Imprint: Vernon Press ISBN: 9798881904470Pages: 216 Publication Date: 25 February 2026 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsLocated primarily in Southern African contexts, but with global relevance and resonance, this rich and nuanced perspective on gender-based violence addresses brutal and everyday male violences against women, children and the LGBTQ+ community, both institutionalized and interpersonal, through the productive lens of contemporary Digital Black and African Feminisms. Calling out the silencing of violence against Black and African women in particular, the book disrupts such erasures and plays witness to such violences. Rather than repeating tropes of damage and victimhood that African feminists have called out, the book also speaks to activisms and agencies, particularly as articulated in contemporary virtual spaces. In this way, the book raises and challenges the ongoing and silenced violences against Black women - remembering, mourning and bearing witness to these - while also protesting against them and the conditions that make such violences possible and imaginable. Importantly, the book, as all feminist scholarship hopes to be, is both political and personal. It works not only with dense theory and literature, but also with embodiment, affect and lived experience, memory and subjective narratives. Indeed, Kutlwano Mokgwathi's beautifully articulated narrative is stitched through with rage, grief, and other entangled affective engagements. What most stands out for the reader is the way in which this powerful and valuable account of contemporary African Feminist Digital activism, weaves both a despairing and reparative or hopeful narrative, what the author calls 'respair': we are reminded to remember the violated and dead, to 'name' violence, resist forgetting, to 'disrupt' denial, whilst also to 'mobilise' against systemic and interpersonal violence, and to engage creative and radical 'reimaginings', through reflexivity, care, solidarity and love. Tamara Shefer Professor, Women's and Gender Studies University of the Western Cape, South Africa Dr. Mokgwathi provides a valuable addition to the literature on feminisms and socio-political challenges in Africa. By centering the longue durée of patriarchy in Africa, particularly the impact of colonialism, and placing digital feminist/womanist activist organizing in their historical context, she offers a thoughtful examination of ""the routine violence that structures women's lives."" Mokgwathi's book contributes to our understanding of how the past has shaped contemporary feminist and womanist movements in Africa in an increasingly digital world. James J. Fisher Researcher, Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life Tufts University Author InformationKutlwano B. L. Mokgwathi, PhD, is a communication specialist with an MA in Visual Communication and a PhD from the School of Media Arts and Studies, both earned at Scripps College of Communication, Ohio University. Her primary research areas include feminist media studies and gender within digital cultures. She emphasizes how African women utilize technology, such as social media, photography, and film, to reshape gender narratives and challenge patriarchal structures. Currently, she is pursuing a second doctoral degree in Women and Gender Studies at the University of the Western Cape. Her new research focuses on digital masculinities and the Africana Manosphere, particularly Red Pill and Alpha Male ideologies, as she explores the concept of masculinity in digital spaces and its relation to Africana identities. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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