Illustration © Nikki McClure

contentarea top menu

About us (4)

type=page

About us: Stefanie Grünangerl

Stefanie Grünangerl (Austria) is an art historian and art mediator. She studied art history, communication science and French at the University of Salzburg and since 2004 works at Galerie 5020, Salzburg. During 2010 - 2012 she was a member of the research team of the “Feminist Media Production in Europe” project based at the University of Salzburg.

type=page

About us: Rosa Reitsamer

holds PhD in sociology and a post-doctoral scholarship at the University Salzburg, Department of Communication. She is currently working at the research project “Feminist Media Production in Europe”, funded by the Austrian Science Fund. She is co-founder of the digital archive http://www.digmeout.org Discourses on Popular Music, Gender and Ethnicity (together with Maria José Belbel) and co-editor of the anthologies Female Consequences.

type=page

About us: Red Chidgey

Red Chidgey is Lecturer in Gender and Media at King's College London. Her doctoral work, "Feminist Assemblages in the UK: Media, Memory and Archives" (2013, London South Bank University), examined the production of usable feminist pasts across recent sites of protest, heritage and citizenship discourses in the UK. She has published extensively on issues of feminist activism, grassroots media and digital memory, and was part of the research team "Feminist Media Production in Europe" based at the University of Salzburg between 2008 and 2010.

type=page

About us: Elke Zobl

Teaser Image: 

Elke Zobl, Austria, created the Grrrl Zine Network - A resource site for international grrrl, lady, queer and trans folk zines, distros and DIY projects (www.grrrlzines.net) in 2001. The web site currently lists around 2000 zines from 43 countries. The Grrrl Zine Network site hosts information on zine distros, comics, magazines, connected organizations, resources and writings on zines; Zobl has also conducted more than 100 interviews with feminist zine editors and distributors in 34 countries.

Syndicate content