Spin-sters women, new media technologies and electronic/dance music /
Abstract (Summary)
The purpose of this project is to understand how it is that women become
electronic/dance music (E/DM) DJs and intervene in the dominant discourses and
practices of cultural production in E/DM and DJ culture. The three main areas I
address are: the impact of the socialization of gender and technology relations,
the various ways that women use the Internet to access knowledge and create
supportive communities, and finally, the hegemonic representation of women in
dominant E/DM culture and how this representation has led to women creating
their own communities of practice.
I take a cultural studies approach to understanding the communicative
strategies women adopt to become DJs. Adopting this methodology requires an
examination of the relationships between people, places, practices, and texts.
Such an interdisciplinary approach also necessitates drawing on literature from
various “studies” areas, including cultural studies, popular music, women’s
studies, technology, and cyber culture studies. The result is a group of
interconnected case studies linked by the ways that each of them addresses
distinct aspects related to my central question of how women become DJs.
It is clear from my research that the increased integration of women in
E/DM is the result of women building face-to-face social networks and creating
their own communities—both on and offline. In the spirit of the Women’s Music
movement that started in the 1970s and Riot Grrrl culture in the early 1990s,
women in E/DM are increasingly taking on the roles of bookings agents, event
planners and promoters, website developers, listserv managers, DJs, producers,
and record label owners. Online forums are used to organize offline events like
monthly potlucks and public performances, in addition to providing spaces
where women can ask questions or share knowledge about all things DJ related.
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Overall, this project highlights the ways that cultural assumptions,
discursive and material practices affect the roles that men and women adopt in
E/DM culture.
Abstract Approved: _____________________________________________________
Thesis Supervisor
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Title and Department
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Date
SPIN-STERS: WOMEN, NEW MEDIA TECHNOLOGIES AND
Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:University of Iowa
School Location:USA - Iowa
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:underground dance music disc jockeys women in the performing arts electronic
ISBN:
Date of Publication: