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Renold, Emma; Ringrose, Jessica – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2017
Inspired by posthuman feminist theory, this paper explores young people's entanglement with the bio-technological landscape of image creation and exchange in young networked peer cultures. We suggest that we are seeing new formations of sexual objectification when the more-than-human is foregrounded and the blurry ontological divide between human…
Descriptors: Sexuality, Telecommunications, Social Media, Social Networks
Bragg, Sara; Renold, Emma; Ringrose, Jessica; Jackson, Carolyn – Sex Education: Sexuality, Society and Learning, 2018
This paper explores the views of young people aged 12-14 on gender diversity, drawing upon school-based qualitative data from a study conducted in England in 2015-2016. Although earlier feminist and queer research in schools often found evidence of variable local gender cultures and gender non-conformity, we argue that the contemporary context,…
Descriptors: Early Adolescents, Gender Issues, Sexual Orientation, Sexual Identity
Dobson, Amy Shields; Ringrose, Jessica – Sex Education: Sexuality, Society and Learning, 2016
In this paper, we explore how what we term "sext education" pedagogies intersect with young people's understandings of, and talk about, sexting through a feminist analysis of two cyber-safety campaign films: "Tagged" from Australia and "Exposed" from the UK. The films tell alarming stories about the ways in which…
Descriptors: Sex Education, Sexuality, Qualitative Research, Films
Ringrose, Jessica; Renold, Emma – Gender and Education, 2012
This viewpoint begins by exploring whether the global phenomenon of the 2011 "SlutWalks" constitutes a feminist politics of re-signification. We then look at some qualitative, focus group data with teen girls who participated in a UK SlutWalk. We suggest girls are not only negotiating a schizoid double pull towards performing knowing…
Descriptors: Females, Focus Groups, Gender Issues, Sexuality
Ringrose, Jessica; Renold, Emma – British Educational Research Journal, 2010
Since the 1990s the educational community has witnessed a proliferation of "bullying" discourses, primarily within the field of educational developmental social psychology. Drawing on ethnographic and qualitative interview data of primary and secondary school girls and boys, this article argues that the discourse "bullying"…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Bullying, Elementary Secondary Education, Females
Ringrose, Jessica – Gender and Education, 2007
This paper examines how an ongoing educational panic over failing boys has contributed to a new celebratory discourse about successful girls. Rather than conceive of this shift as an anti-feminist feminist backlash, the paper examines how the successful girl discourse is postfeminist, and how liberal feminist theory has contributed to narrowly…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Equal Education, Sexual Identity, Poverty
Ringrose, Jessica – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2008
The present paper explores the conceptual limitations of the bully discourses that ground UK anti-bullying policy frameworks and psychological research literatures on school bullying, suggesting they largely ignore gender, (hetero)sexuality and the social, cultural and subjective dynamics of conflict and aggression among teen-aged girls. To…
Descriptors: Bullying, Psychological Studies, Females, School Choice