Deck 5: Media and Culture

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Question
The male gaze can be defined as the process of men looking at pornography.
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Question
Chapter 5 emphasizes that MTV is a blending of advertising and entertainment that has been primarily negative for women.
Question
Men are more likely than women to use the Internet for entertainment purposes.
Question
Toni Morrison received the Nobel Prize for literature.
Question
Virginia Woolf asked the question, "Why has there been no female Huckleberry Finn?"
Question
Most successful bloggers are formally trained as journalists.
Question
The Walt Disney Corporation is the largest media conglomerate in the world.
Question
Cloud computing merges business with social networking concepts by developing interactive communities that connect individuals based on shared business needs or experiences.
Question
More than half of the world's population has used the services of the Internet.
Question
About two-thirds of Americans with cell phones access the Internet through their phones.
Question
Three-quarters of all U.S. teenagers use a cell phone.
Question
Mobile phone technologies appear to encourage more prosocial and empathic behavior.
Question
Which of the following is a term describing the speed with which technology evolves or becomes obsolete?

A) Glass escalator
B) Glass ceiling
C) Technology turnover
D) Technology acceleration
Question
Which of the following is the activist media literacy project discussed in Chapter 5?

A) Fostering Activism and Alternatives Now! (FAAN)
B) Freedom from Media Oppression! (FFMO)
C) Women United for Media Transformation! (WUMT)
D) Women Against Media Garbage! (WAMG)
Question
Which of the following is a metal essential for mobile phone technologies whose mining is currently financing a war?

A) Plutonium
B) Coltan
C) Aluminum
D) Carbon
Question
Who identified the concept of the "male gaze"?

A) bell hooks
B) Audre Lorde
C) Linda Alvarez
D) Laura Mulvey
Question
Those theorists that believe pornography is empowering for women are known as

A) Sex renegades
B) Sex radicals
C) Sex theorists
D) Sex reformers
Question
Chapter 5 explains that women's magazines involve a genre that can be divided into certain types. Which of the following types are included in this genre?

A) Fashion
B) Domesticity
C) Issue periodicals
D) Both (a) and (b)
E) Both (b) and (c)
F) All of the above
G) None of the above
Question
The "status quo" involves

A) Established patterns of power
B) Systems of inequality that enforce "isms"
C) Political power groups
D) All of the above
Question
Currently approximately what percentage of internet traffic is pornography?

A) 23
B) 18
C) 15
D) 8
Question
Web 2.0 applications include

A) Data dredging
B) Mashups
C) Blogging
D) Social networking
E) Both (a) and (b) f. Both (c) and (d)
G) All of the above
H) None of the above
Question
Activist strategies for getting the media's attention do not include which of the following?

A) Have a clear message
B) Offer news
C) Get in reporters' faces
D) Choose the right media
Question
According to the "Digital Around the World in 2018" graphic on p. 226, what percentage of the world population uses the internet?

A) More than one-half
B) One-third
C) One-quarter
D) One-fifth
Question
The #MeToo movement is an example of activism (rather than slacktivism) because

A) People marched and used their computers
B) Activists called for more formal structural support of survivors
C) Stars like Alyssa Milano participated
D) There was a backlash against people who named abusers
Question
Big Hollywood studio films usually reflect the cultural norm because

A) Only normal people go to the movies
B) The people who control the budgets for Hollywood films generally have a narrow world view
C) Viewers won't pay to see feminist films
D) Most contemporary filmmakers don't want to highlight different perspectives
Question
Reading "Thinking about Shakespeare's Sister" Virginia Woolf
-woman could never have written the works of Shakespeare.
Question
Reading "Thinking about Shakespeare's Sister" Virginia Woolf
-In "Thinking about Shakespeare's Sister," Virginia Woolf tells readers that Shakespeare's imaginary sister left home for London because she didn't want to get married.
Question
Reading "Thinking about Shakespeare's Sister" Virginia Woolf
-In Virginia Woolf's "Thinking about Shakespeare's Sister," Shakespeare's sister's first play met with very poor reviews because she was a woman.
Question
Reading "Thinking about Shakespeare's Sister" Virginia Woolf
-In Virginia Woolf's "Thinking about Shakespeare's Sister," Shakespeare's imaginary sister came to a bad end and was buried specifically near where?

A) Paddington
B) Trafalgar Square
C) Westminster Abbey
D) The Elephant and Castle
Question
Reading "Thinking about Shakespeare's Sister" Virginia Woolf
-In her essay "Thinking About Shakespeare's Sister," Virginia Woolf names Shakespeare's imaginary sister

A) Jane
B) Joan
C) Judith
D) Janet
Question
Reading "Thinking about Shakespeare's Sister" Virginia Woolf
-In her essay, "Thinking About Shakespeare's Sister," Virginia Woolf argues that highly gifted girls who lived during Shakespeare's time would not become successful writers like Shakespeare because they were not allowed to

A) Receive an education
B) Practice the craft of writing
C) Live alone
D) Earn money independent of their families
E) Both (a) and (b)
F) Both (c) and (d)
G) All of the above
H) None of the above
Question
Reading "The Wife" Emily Dickinson
-In "The Wife," Emily Dickinson demands that women keep their own name at marriage.
Question
Reading "The Wife" Emily Dickinson
-In "The Wife," Emily Dickinson notes that it is traditional for brides to be given wood and pearls at the wedding.
Question
Reading "The Wife" Emily Dickinson
-In "The Wife," Emily Dickinson critiques the institution of marriage because it stifles women.
Question
Reading "The Wife" Emily Dickinson
-According to Dickinson in "The Wife," being a wife means

A) Giving up your former life
B) Rising to meet a husband's demands
C) Agreeing to sexual relations nightly
D) Both (a) and (b)
E) Both (a) and (c)
F) All of the above
Question
Reading "The Wife" Emily Dickinson
-In "The Wife," Emily Dickinson writes in the first stanza that the woman in her poem,
"…dropped/
The playthings of her life to take the honorable work/
Of woman and wife."
These lines can be interpreted to mean which of the following?

A) A woman's interests outside of marriage are considered unimportant
B) A woman's interests outside or marriage are considered to be very important
C) Sometimes women drop their marital responsibilities to follow their dreams
D) Sometimes men drop their wives when they carry them over the threshold after the wedding
Question
Reading "The Wife" Emily Dickinson
-In "The Wife," Emily Dickinson writes in the third stanza,
"…as the sea/
Develops pearl and weed/
But only to himself is known/
The fathoms they abide."
These lines can be interpreted to mean which of the following?

A) Women who are bad housekeepers are like weeds
B) Women who are good housekeepers are like pearls
C) Women don't share their dreams and aspirations with anyone
D) Women should share their dreams and aspirations with their husbands
Question
Reading "Poetry is Not a Luxury" Audre Lorde
-Audre Lorde explains that the places of possibility within ourselves are dark, ancient, and hidden ("Poetry Is Not a Luxury").
Question
Reading "Poetry is Not a Luxury" Audre Lorde
-Audre Lorde's "Poetry Is Not a Luxury, the white fathers tell us, "I think, therefore

A) I am
B) I conquer
C) I love
D) I have power
Question
Reading "Poetry is Not a Luxury" Audre Lorde
-The European way of living, according to Audre Lorde in "Poetry Is Not a Luxury," relies solely upon

A) Emotion
B) Objectivity
C) Ideas and cognition
D) All of the above
Question
Reading "Poetry is Not a Luxury" Audre Lorde
-According to Audre Lorde in "Poetry Is Not a Luxury," poetry is not only dream and vision but also

A) The structure of the ways our lives are built
B) The bridge for our emotions
C) The foundation for transformation
D) All of the above
Question
Reading "Poetry is Not a Luxury" Audre Lorde
-In her essay, "Poetry Is Not a Luxury," Audre Lorde argues that poetry is

A) A source of empowerment for women
B) Just as important as clothes and jewelry
C) Less important than clothes and jewelry
D) Not worth making time for
Question
Reading "Tweeting Back While Shouting Back: Social Media and Feminist Activism" Emma Turley and Jenny Fisher
-Emma Turley and Jenny Fisher argue that social media and SNSs are important platforms for feminist activism.
Question
Reading "Tweeting Back While Shouting Back: Social Media and Feminist Activism" Emma Turley and Jenny Fisher
-Emma Turley and Jenny Fisher argue that social media and SNSs are a 21st-century feminist utopia.
Question
Reading "Tweeting Back While Shouting Back: Social Media and Feminist Activism" Emma Turley and Jenny Fisher
-#EverydaySexism is a hashtag that Laura Bates created to allow women to

A) Show that sexism doesn't exist in the 21st century
B) Name micro and macro sexist incidents from their daily lives
C) Commit libel against individual men by lying about them in public
D) Both (a) and (b)
E) Both (b) and (c)
F) All of the above
G) None of the above
Question
Reading "Tweeting Back While Shouting Back: Social Media and Feminist Activism" Emma Turley and Jenny Fisher
-#AskThicke is a hashtag that feminists appropriated to

A) Ask for Robin Thicke to re-Tweet them
B) Endorse Robin Thicke's views on rape culture
C) Ask Robin Thicke to sing "Blurred Lines"
D) Confront Robin Thicke about his misogynistic lyrics and video
Question
Reading "Tweeting Back While Shouting Back: Social Media and Feminist Activism" Emma Turley and Jenny Fisher
-Choose one reason why social media does not have radical potential for feminist activism:

A) It generates a space for discussion about feminist issues
B) Trolls often threaten to kill online feminist activists
C) Diverse groups of people can participate
D) Feminists can share their experiences with one another
Question
Reading "The Sexual Politics of Veggies: Beyoncé's 'Commodity Veg*ism'" Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani
-According to Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani, vegetables have traditionally been associated with sexual abstention and frigidity ("The Sexual Politics of Veggies").
Question
Reading "The Sexual Politics of Veggies: Beyoncé's 'Commodity Veg*ism'" Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani
-"Post-feminism" is a celebration of political engagement against gender inequality (Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani/"The Sexual Politics of Veggies").
Question
Reading "The Sexual Politics of Veggies: Beyoncé's 'Commodity Veg*ism'" Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani
-Food and gender are symbolically linked (Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani/"The Sexual Politics of Veggies").
Question
Reading "The Sexual Politics of Veggies: Beyoncé's 'Commodity Veg*ism'" Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani
-In "The Sexual Politics of Veggies," Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani argue that Beyoncé's widely publicized adoption of a vegan diet

A) Commodifies veganism as a consumer choice
B) Connects veganism with self-control and self-improvement
C) Undermines eco-feminist veganism as an ethical and political choice
D) Both (a) and (b)
E) Both (c) and (d)
F) All of the above
G) None of the above.
Question
Reading "The Sexual Politics of Veggies: Beyoncé's 'Commodity Veg*ism'" Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani
-In "The Sexual Politics of Veggies," Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani's term "commodity veg*ism," refers to which of the following?

A) Fresh fruits and vegetables are very expensive
B) Ethical eco-feminist veganism and vegetarianism has been appropriated and used in the service of post-feminist aims
C) People eat more vegetables since they learned about Beyoncé's vegan diet
D) Both (a) and (b)
E) Both (c) and (d)
F) All of the above
G) None of the above.
Question
Reading "Cardi B: Love & Hip Hop's Unlikely Feminist Hero" Sherri Williams
-In "Cardi B," Sherri Williams argues that academic feminists should take Cardi B's definition of feminism seriously.
Question
Reading "Cardi B: Love & Hip Hop's Unlikely Feminist Hero" Sherri Williams
-Gwendolyn Pough's term "bringing wreck" means to destroy something beyond all recognition (Sherri Williams/"Cardi B").
Question
Reading "Cardi B: Love & Hip Hop's Unlikely Feminist Hero" Sherri Williams
-In "Cardi B," Sherri Williams defends Beyoncé's feminism, arguing that Beyoncé has

A) Grown as a feminist over time
B) Called for resistance to white supremacist institutions
C) Sampled Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's We Should All Be Feminists
D) Both (a) and (b)
E) Both (b) and (c)
F) All of the above
G) None of the above
Question
Reading "Cardi B: Love & Hip Hop's Unlikely Feminist Hero" Sherri Williams
-In "Cardi B," Sherri Williams argues that Cardi B's feminism is worth supporting because

A) Bodak Yellow is an amazing song
B) Cardi B is authentic and true to herself
C) Cardi B doesn't strip anymore
D) Love & Hip Hop was a hit show
Question
Reading "Cardi B: Love & Hip Hop's Unlikely Feminist Hero" Sherri Williams
-The fact that some academic feminists respond negatively to pop culture icons such as Cardi B and Beyoncé indicates which of the following (Sherri Williams/"Cardi B")?

A) There is still a notion that academics should define what counts as "real" feminism
B) Academics and pop culture icons don't get along
C) Feminism and pop culture don't have anything to do with each other
D) Both (a) and (b)
E) Both (b) and (c)
F) All of the above
G) None of the above
Question
Reading "A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?: Young Women Discuss the Dove 'Real Beauty' Campaign" Judith Taylor, Josee Johnston, Krista Whitehead
-Scholarship on the commodification of feminist ideals generally focuses more on the production of corporate messages rather than on their reception ("A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?").
Question
Reading "A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?: Young Women Discuss the Dove 'Real Beauty' Campaign" Judith Taylor, Josee Johnston, Krista Whitehead
-Feminist consumerism is a corporate strategy that uses feminist messages of empowerment to market products ("A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?").
Question
Reading "A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?: Young Women Discuss the Dove 'Real Beauty' Campaign" Judith Taylor, Josee Johnston, Krista Whitehead
-The Dove "Real Beauty" campaign specifically targets women's insecurities about their bodies ("A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?").
Question
Reading "A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?: Young Women Discuss the Dove 'Real Beauty' Campaign" Judith Taylor, Josee Johnston, Krista Whitehead
-The authors of "A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?" note that focus group participants felt that the "Real Beauty" campaign didn't authentically engage with feminist ideas because the campaign

A) Reinforced the concept that beauty is compulsory for women
B) Featured women in their underwear
C) Encouraged gender nonconformity
D) Featured dark-skinned models in hijab
Question
Reading "A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?: Young Women Discuss the Dove 'Real Beauty' Campaign" Judith Taylor, Josee Johnston, Krista Whitehead
-The authors of "A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?" note that focus group participants were wary of the idea that corporations can promote feminist agendas because of their concerns that

A) Corporations don't employ academic feminists
B) Corporations don't give money and support to causes without strings attached
C) Corporations are ultimately more invested in making money than enacting social change
D) Corporations will strive to decenter consumerism
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Deck 5: Media and Culture
1
The male gaze can be defined as the process of men looking at pornography.
False
2
Chapter 5 emphasizes that MTV is a blending of advertising and entertainment that has been primarily negative for women.
False
3
Men are more likely than women to use the Internet for entertainment purposes.
True
4
Toni Morrison received the Nobel Prize for literature.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Virginia Woolf asked the question, "Why has there been no female Huckleberry Finn?"
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Most successful bloggers are formally trained as journalists.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The Walt Disney Corporation is the largest media conglomerate in the world.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Cloud computing merges business with social networking concepts by developing interactive communities that connect individuals based on shared business needs or experiences.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
More than half of the world's population has used the services of the Internet.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
About two-thirds of Americans with cell phones access the Internet through their phones.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
11
Three-quarters of all U.S. teenagers use a cell phone.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Mobile phone technologies appear to encourage more prosocial and empathic behavior.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Which of the following is a term describing the speed with which technology evolves or becomes obsolete?

A) Glass escalator
B) Glass ceiling
C) Technology turnover
D) Technology acceleration
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Which of the following is the activist media literacy project discussed in Chapter 5?

A) Fostering Activism and Alternatives Now! (FAAN)
B) Freedom from Media Oppression! (FFMO)
C) Women United for Media Transformation! (WUMT)
D) Women Against Media Garbage! (WAMG)
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Which of the following is a metal essential for mobile phone technologies whose mining is currently financing a war?

A) Plutonium
B) Coltan
C) Aluminum
D) Carbon
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Who identified the concept of the "male gaze"?

A) bell hooks
B) Audre Lorde
C) Linda Alvarez
D) Laura Mulvey
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Those theorists that believe pornography is empowering for women are known as

A) Sex renegades
B) Sex radicals
C) Sex theorists
D) Sex reformers
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Chapter 5 explains that women's magazines involve a genre that can be divided into certain types. Which of the following types are included in this genre?

A) Fashion
B) Domesticity
C) Issue periodicals
D) Both (a) and (b)
E) Both (b) and (c)
F) All of the above
G) None of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The "status quo" involves

A) Established patterns of power
B) Systems of inequality that enforce "isms"
C) Political power groups
D) All of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Currently approximately what percentage of internet traffic is pornography?

A) 23
B) 18
C) 15
D) 8
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Web 2.0 applications include

A) Data dredging
B) Mashups
C) Blogging
D) Social networking
E) Both (a) and (b) f. Both (c) and (d)
G) All of the above
H) None of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Activist strategies for getting the media's attention do not include which of the following?

A) Have a clear message
B) Offer news
C) Get in reporters' faces
D) Choose the right media
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
According to the "Digital Around the World in 2018" graphic on p. 226, what percentage of the world population uses the internet?

A) More than one-half
B) One-third
C) One-quarter
D) One-fifth
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The #MeToo movement is an example of activism (rather than slacktivism) because

A) People marched and used their computers
B) Activists called for more formal structural support of survivors
C) Stars like Alyssa Milano participated
D) There was a backlash against people who named abusers
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Big Hollywood studio films usually reflect the cultural norm because

A) Only normal people go to the movies
B) The people who control the budgets for Hollywood films generally have a narrow world view
C) Viewers won't pay to see feminist films
D) Most contemporary filmmakers don't want to highlight different perspectives
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Reading "Thinking about Shakespeare's Sister" Virginia Woolf
-woman could never have written the works of Shakespeare.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Reading "Thinking about Shakespeare's Sister" Virginia Woolf
-In "Thinking about Shakespeare's Sister," Virginia Woolf tells readers that Shakespeare's imaginary sister left home for London because she didn't want to get married.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Reading "Thinking about Shakespeare's Sister" Virginia Woolf
-In Virginia Woolf's "Thinking about Shakespeare's Sister," Shakespeare's sister's first play met with very poor reviews because she was a woman.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Reading "Thinking about Shakespeare's Sister" Virginia Woolf
-In Virginia Woolf's "Thinking about Shakespeare's Sister," Shakespeare's imaginary sister came to a bad end and was buried specifically near where?

A) Paddington
B) Trafalgar Square
C) Westminster Abbey
D) The Elephant and Castle
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Reading "Thinking about Shakespeare's Sister" Virginia Woolf
-In her essay "Thinking About Shakespeare's Sister," Virginia Woolf names Shakespeare's imaginary sister

A) Jane
B) Joan
C) Judith
D) Janet
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Reading "Thinking about Shakespeare's Sister" Virginia Woolf
-In her essay, "Thinking About Shakespeare's Sister," Virginia Woolf argues that highly gifted girls who lived during Shakespeare's time would not become successful writers like Shakespeare because they were not allowed to

A) Receive an education
B) Practice the craft of writing
C) Live alone
D) Earn money independent of their families
E) Both (a) and (b)
F) Both (c) and (d)
G) All of the above
H) None of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Reading "The Wife" Emily Dickinson
-In "The Wife," Emily Dickinson demands that women keep their own name at marriage.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Reading "The Wife" Emily Dickinson
-In "The Wife," Emily Dickinson notes that it is traditional for brides to be given wood and pearls at the wedding.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Reading "The Wife" Emily Dickinson
-In "The Wife," Emily Dickinson critiques the institution of marriage because it stifles women.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Reading "The Wife" Emily Dickinson
-According to Dickinson in "The Wife," being a wife means

A) Giving up your former life
B) Rising to meet a husband's demands
C) Agreeing to sexual relations nightly
D) Both (a) and (b)
E) Both (a) and (c)
F) All of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Reading "The Wife" Emily Dickinson
-In "The Wife," Emily Dickinson writes in the first stanza that the woman in her poem,
"…dropped/
The playthings of her life to take the honorable work/
Of woman and wife."
These lines can be interpreted to mean which of the following?

A) A woman's interests outside of marriage are considered unimportant
B) A woman's interests outside or marriage are considered to be very important
C) Sometimes women drop their marital responsibilities to follow their dreams
D) Sometimes men drop their wives when they carry them over the threshold after the wedding
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Reading "The Wife" Emily Dickinson
-In "The Wife," Emily Dickinson writes in the third stanza,
"…as the sea/
Develops pearl and weed/
But only to himself is known/
The fathoms they abide."
These lines can be interpreted to mean which of the following?

A) Women who are bad housekeepers are like weeds
B) Women who are good housekeepers are like pearls
C) Women don't share their dreams and aspirations with anyone
D) Women should share their dreams and aspirations with their husbands
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Reading "Poetry is Not a Luxury" Audre Lorde
-Audre Lorde explains that the places of possibility within ourselves are dark, ancient, and hidden ("Poetry Is Not a Luxury").
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Reading "Poetry is Not a Luxury" Audre Lorde
-Audre Lorde's "Poetry Is Not a Luxury, the white fathers tell us, "I think, therefore

A) I am
B) I conquer
C) I love
D) I have power
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Reading "Poetry is Not a Luxury" Audre Lorde
-The European way of living, according to Audre Lorde in "Poetry Is Not a Luxury," relies solely upon

A) Emotion
B) Objectivity
C) Ideas and cognition
D) All of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Reading "Poetry is Not a Luxury" Audre Lorde
-According to Audre Lorde in "Poetry Is Not a Luxury," poetry is not only dream and vision but also

A) The structure of the ways our lives are built
B) The bridge for our emotions
C) The foundation for transformation
D) All of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Reading "Poetry is Not a Luxury" Audre Lorde
-In her essay, "Poetry Is Not a Luxury," Audre Lorde argues that poetry is

A) A source of empowerment for women
B) Just as important as clothes and jewelry
C) Less important than clothes and jewelry
D) Not worth making time for
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Reading "Tweeting Back While Shouting Back: Social Media and Feminist Activism" Emma Turley and Jenny Fisher
-Emma Turley and Jenny Fisher argue that social media and SNSs are important platforms for feminist activism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
Reading "Tweeting Back While Shouting Back: Social Media and Feminist Activism" Emma Turley and Jenny Fisher
-Emma Turley and Jenny Fisher argue that social media and SNSs are a 21st-century feminist utopia.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Reading "Tweeting Back While Shouting Back: Social Media and Feminist Activism" Emma Turley and Jenny Fisher
-#EverydaySexism is a hashtag that Laura Bates created to allow women to

A) Show that sexism doesn't exist in the 21st century
B) Name micro and macro sexist incidents from their daily lives
C) Commit libel against individual men by lying about them in public
D) Both (a) and (b)
E) Both (b) and (c)
F) All of the above
G) None of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
Reading "Tweeting Back While Shouting Back: Social Media and Feminist Activism" Emma Turley and Jenny Fisher
-#AskThicke is a hashtag that feminists appropriated to

A) Ask for Robin Thicke to re-Tweet them
B) Endorse Robin Thicke's views on rape culture
C) Ask Robin Thicke to sing "Blurred Lines"
D) Confront Robin Thicke about his misogynistic lyrics and video
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47
Reading "Tweeting Back While Shouting Back: Social Media and Feminist Activism" Emma Turley and Jenny Fisher
-Choose one reason why social media does not have radical potential for feminist activism:

A) It generates a space for discussion about feminist issues
B) Trolls often threaten to kill online feminist activists
C) Diverse groups of people can participate
D) Feminists can share their experiences with one another
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48
Reading "The Sexual Politics of Veggies: Beyoncé's 'Commodity Veg*ism'" Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani
-According to Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani, vegetables have traditionally been associated with sexual abstention and frigidity ("The Sexual Politics of Veggies").
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49
Reading "The Sexual Politics of Veggies: Beyoncé's 'Commodity Veg*ism'" Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani
-"Post-feminism" is a celebration of political engagement against gender inequality (Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani/"The Sexual Politics of Veggies").
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50
Reading "The Sexual Politics of Veggies: Beyoncé's 'Commodity Veg*ism'" Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani
-Food and gender are symbolically linked (Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani/"The Sexual Politics of Veggies").
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51
Reading "The Sexual Politics of Veggies: Beyoncé's 'Commodity Veg*ism'" Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani
-In "The Sexual Politics of Veggies," Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani argue that Beyoncé's widely publicized adoption of a vegan diet

A) Commodifies veganism as a consumer choice
B) Connects veganism with self-control and self-improvement
C) Undermines eco-feminist veganism as an ethical and political choice
D) Both (a) and (b)
E) Both (c) and (d)
F) All of the above
G) None of the above.
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52
Reading "The Sexual Politics of Veggies: Beyoncé's 'Commodity Veg*ism'" Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani
-In "The Sexual Politics of Veggies," Ella Fegitz and Daniela Pirani's term "commodity veg*ism," refers to which of the following?

A) Fresh fruits and vegetables are very expensive
B) Ethical eco-feminist veganism and vegetarianism has been appropriated and used in the service of post-feminist aims
C) People eat more vegetables since they learned about Beyoncé's vegan diet
D) Both (a) and (b)
E) Both (c) and (d)
F) All of the above
G) None of the above.
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53
Reading "Cardi B: Love & Hip Hop's Unlikely Feminist Hero" Sherri Williams
-In "Cardi B," Sherri Williams argues that academic feminists should take Cardi B's definition of feminism seriously.
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54
Reading "Cardi B: Love & Hip Hop's Unlikely Feminist Hero" Sherri Williams
-Gwendolyn Pough's term "bringing wreck" means to destroy something beyond all recognition (Sherri Williams/"Cardi B").
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55
Reading "Cardi B: Love & Hip Hop's Unlikely Feminist Hero" Sherri Williams
-In "Cardi B," Sherri Williams defends Beyoncé's feminism, arguing that Beyoncé has

A) Grown as a feminist over time
B) Called for resistance to white supremacist institutions
C) Sampled Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's We Should All Be Feminists
D) Both (a) and (b)
E) Both (b) and (c)
F) All of the above
G) None of the above
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56
Reading "Cardi B: Love & Hip Hop's Unlikely Feminist Hero" Sherri Williams
-In "Cardi B," Sherri Williams argues that Cardi B's feminism is worth supporting because

A) Bodak Yellow is an amazing song
B) Cardi B is authentic and true to herself
C) Cardi B doesn't strip anymore
D) Love & Hip Hop was a hit show
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57
Reading "Cardi B: Love & Hip Hop's Unlikely Feminist Hero" Sherri Williams
-The fact that some academic feminists respond negatively to pop culture icons such as Cardi B and Beyoncé indicates which of the following (Sherri Williams/"Cardi B")?

A) There is still a notion that academics should define what counts as "real" feminism
B) Academics and pop culture icons don't get along
C) Feminism and pop culture don't have anything to do with each other
D) Both (a) and (b)
E) Both (b) and (c)
F) All of the above
G) None of the above
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58
Reading "A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?: Young Women Discuss the Dove 'Real Beauty' Campaign" Judith Taylor, Josee Johnston, Krista Whitehead
-Scholarship on the commodification of feminist ideals generally focuses more on the production of corporate messages rather than on their reception ("A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?").
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59
Reading "A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?: Young Women Discuss the Dove 'Real Beauty' Campaign" Judith Taylor, Josee Johnston, Krista Whitehead
-Feminist consumerism is a corporate strategy that uses feminist messages of empowerment to market products ("A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?").
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60
Reading "A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?: Young Women Discuss the Dove 'Real Beauty' Campaign" Judith Taylor, Josee Johnston, Krista Whitehead
-The Dove "Real Beauty" campaign specifically targets women's insecurities about their bodies ("A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?").
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61
Reading "A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?: Young Women Discuss the Dove 'Real Beauty' Campaign" Judith Taylor, Josee Johnston, Krista Whitehead
-The authors of "A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?" note that focus group participants felt that the "Real Beauty" campaign didn't authentically engage with feminist ideas because the campaign

A) Reinforced the concept that beauty is compulsory for women
B) Featured women in their underwear
C) Encouraged gender nonconformity
D) Featured dark-skinned models in hijab
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62
Reading "A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?: Young Women Discuss the Dove 'Real Beauty' Campaign" Judith Taylor, Josee Johnston, Krista Whitehead
-The authors of "A Corporation in Feminist Clothing?" note that focus group participants were wary of the idea that corporations can promote feminist agendas because of their concerns that

A) Corporations don't employ academic feminists
B) Corporations don't give money and support to causes without strings attached
C) Corporations are ultimately more invested in making money than enacting social change
D) Corporations will strive to decenter consumerism
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.