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This volume aims to look both at as well as beyond the 'Delhi Gang Rape' through the lens of Indian Media Studies. The editors consider it a critical event, or rather critical media event that needs to be contextualized within a rapidly changing, diversifying and globalizing Indian society which is as much confronted with new ruptures, asymmetries and inequalities as it may still be shaped by the old-established structures of a patriarchal social order. But the volume also looks beyond the 'Delhi Gang Rape' and introduces other related thematic areas of an emerging research field which links Youth, Media and Gender Studies.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This volume aims to look both at as well as beyond the 'Delhi Gang Rape' through the lens of Indian Media Studies. The editors consider it a critical event, or rather critical media event that needs to be contextualized within a rapidly changing, diversifying and globalizing Indian society which is as much confronted with new ruptures, asymmetries and inequalities as it may still be shaped by the old-established structures of a patriarchal social order. But the volume also looks beyond the 'Delhi Gang Rape' and introduces other related thematic areas of an emerging research field which links Youth, Media and Gender Studies.
Autorenporträt
Nadja-Christina Schneider is a Junior Professor for Mediality and Intermediality, Institute for Asian and African Studies, Humboldt University Berlin. Her main area of research is in the interrelationship between processes of medialisation and sociocultural change in India. Fritzi-Marie Titzmann is a faculty member at the Institute of Indology and Central Asian Studies at Leipzig University. Her research focuses on gender, new media and social change in India with particular interest in digital phenomena.