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"Finally, we have a body image and media studies text that engages broadly and deeply with the shape-shifting cultural and psychological currents that mark this tumultuous moment in the Anglo-western world. Post-feminism and Body Image weaves new theories and methods by tracing, untangling and making sense of the ever knotty, contradictory bundle of forces that help to make us, collectively and individually: between feminist and post-feminist discourses and sensibilities that offer up radically different visions of "the good life"; between media studies perspectives that seek to analyse these larger cultural patterns and their neoliberal rootings, and psychological ones that probe the meanings and workings of our resulting selves; and between the massive cultural, economic and political shifts that we've witnessed over the past thirty years and our sexualities, gendered beings and doings, and health making practices-indeed, our most intimate relations with our bodily selves. In advancing theoretically rich and lucid readings of feminized and masculinized everyday body practices, Riley and Evans have crafted a paradigm-shifting tome." - Carla Rice, Canada Research Chair, Feminist Studies and Social Practice, and Professor, University of Guelph, Canada
"Nuanced, theoretically sophisticated, accessible, and engaging, Postfeminism and Body Image provides a very timely exploration of contemporary body image issues. The authors take a critical transdisciplinary approach, drawing on cultural studies, sociology, economics, politics, geography; gender studies, psychology and media studies to interrogate the ways in which bodies and body image are understood, experienced, and regulated in the context of post-feminism. This book significantly advances our understandings of both postfeminism and body image and is a must-have for new and experienced researchers alike." - Helen Malson, Associate Professor, Social Psychology, University West of England, UK
"This is a marvellous and important contribution to key debates in feminist cultural and media studies. It extends the research arc of 'postfeminism' so that there is a wider and more international focus, while at the same time providing more detailed analysis of specific iterations in consumer culture. This work also offers further theoretical refinement in the field, as well as illuminating our understanding of the stubborn persistence of 'body image' across gender and popular culture." - Angela McRobbie, FBA, Visiting Professor, Centre for Post-Digital Cultures, Institute for Creative Cultures, Coventry University, UK