Acknowledgments
Introduction: Feminist Takes on Networking Justice
Chapter 1: A Sign of the Times: Hashtag Feminism as a Conceptual Framework, Tara L. Conley
Chapter 2: Virtual Sojourners: The Duality of Visibility and Erasure for Black Women and LGBTQ People in the Digital Age, Melissa Brown
Chapter 3: Chronic Fem(me)bots: Keywords for Crip Feminists, Adan Jerreat-Poole
Chapter 4: Virtual Dwelling: Feminist Orientations to Digital Communities, Brianna I. Wiens
Chapter 5: Native and Indigenous Women’s Cyber-Defense of Lands and Peoples, Marisa Elena Duarte
Chapter 6: “Being Seen for Who I Am”: Counterpublic Trans Intelligibility and Queer Worldmaking on YouTube, Ace J. Eckstein
Chapter 7: Online (Indian/South Asian) Digital Protest Publics Negotiating #POC, #BIPOC, and #anticaste, Radhika Gajjala, Sarah Ford, Vijeta Kumar, and Sujatha Subramanian
Chapter 8: Affect Amplifiers: Feminist Activists and Digital Cartographies of Feminicide, Helena Suárez Val
Chapter 9: Reproductive Justice and Activism Online: Digital Feminisms and Organizational/Activist Use of Social Networking Sites, Leandra H. Hernández and Sarah De Los Santos Upton
Chapter 10: Racial Justice and Scholar-Activism, Angela Smith, Ihudiya Finda Williams, and Alexandra To
Chapter 11: Hope Wears A White Collar: RBG Memes and Signifying Intergenerational Solidarity, Elizabeth Nathanson
About the Contributors