User talk:Jafrah/sandbox
JACEE'S EDITS. Hey Jafrah, Below are a few edits I have for your Wiki article on your first draft. Let me know if you have any questions at all.
“She is employed at the School of Journalism and Mass Communications, University of Iowa’s College of Arts and Sciences.” -Flip this around, “University of Iowa’s College of Arts and Sciences, School of Journalism and Mass Communications.”
“She currently is a joint professor of gender, etc.” - Flip “currently” and “is” - “She is currently etc.”
Instead of using the word “she” consistently throughout your paper, try using her last name - “Durham is a joint professor of gender, etc.”
“She is also the Faculty Fellow at the Office of etc.” Replace the comma with “at” to keep it flowing and sound more like a story.
I would throw in her place of birth somewhere in the beginning sentences of your first paragraph to feed more background information first.
Good job with your research on her schooling background.
In the scholarly work section, maybe give more examples of her work and what she has done with that research.
You did a really good job, Jaf! Just a few edits here and there and if you need help with how to cite in Wiki I would be more than willing to help you out. -JaCee Aaseth
Katelyn Czichotzki's Edits:
- Capitalize "Professor of Gender, Women's and Sexuality Studies" - Maybe flip the Gender Women's and Sexuality to "Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies". Flows a little better. - You use "she" a lot... try referring to her by her last name in replacement for some of the she's. - I feel like the birthplace should go earlier in the paragraph/page. - Good organization! - Under Awards/Honors, maybe use her last name instead of beginning with referring to her as "her". - Love it, Jafrah! Good job. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Katelynczi (talk • contribs) 02:18, 10 April 2017 (UTC)
Decent job of peer review on this one!
I SEE THE PROBLEM WITH EDITING -- YOU ARE IN USER TALK/SANDBOX. ONLY YOU CAN ACCESS YOUR SANDBOX. SEE IF YOU CAN CUT AND PASTE WHAT YOU HAVE HERE DIRECTLY TO YOUR SANDBOX, WHICH SHOULD BE AN ICON ON THE TOP NEAR YOUR NAME. WHEN I'M COMMENTING I'M IN EDIT SOURCE VS EDIT, WHICH PUTS ME IN WIKI EDIT. COME SEE ME IF YOU CAN'T GET IT FIXED.
Bibliography:
Notary Source
(14) Durham, M. G. (2004, June). Constructing the “New Ethnicities”: Media, Sexuality, and Diaspora Identity in the Lives of South Asian Immigrant Girls. Retrieved February 16, 2017, from http://www.csun.edu/~vcspc00g/301/newethnicities-csmc.pdf I ASSUME THIS CITE TALK ABT HER, BUT IT LOOKS LIKE IT BY HER. CAN YOU FIND ANY OTHER NOTEWORTHY CITES?
Key Articles
(1) School of Journalism & Mass Communication. (2017, January 11). Retrieved February 16, 2017, from https://clas.uiowa.edu/sjmc/people/meenakshi-gigi-durham
(2) Durham, M. G. (1999). Girls, Media, and the Negotiation of Sexuality: A Study of Race, Class, and Gender in Adolescent Peer Groups. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 76(2), 193-216. doi:10.1177/107769909907600202
(3) Durham, M. G. (1998). Dilemmas of Desire: Representations of Adolescent Sexuality in Two Teen Magazines. Youth & Society, 29(3), 369-389. doi:10.1177/0044118x98029003005
(4) Durham, M. G. (1998), On the Relevance of Standpoint Epistemology to the Practice of Journalism: The Case for “Strong Objectivity”. Communication Theory, 8: 117–140. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2885.1998.tb00213.x
(5) Durham, M. G. (1999). Articulating adolescent girls' resistance to patriarchal discourse in popular media. Women's studies in communication, 22(2), 210-229.
(6) Durham, M. G., & Kellner, D. M. (Eds.). (2009). Media and cultural studies: Keyworks. John Wiley & Sons. Chicago
(7) Durham, M. G. (2009). The Lolita effect: The media sexualization of young girls and what we can do about it. The Overlook Press. Chicago
(8) Durham, M. G. (1995). The taming of the shrew: Women’s magazines and the regulation of desire. Chicago
(9) Durham, M. G. (2001). Displaced persons: Symbols of South Asian femininity and the returned gaze in US media culture. Communication Theory, 11(2), 201-217.
(10) Durham, M. G. (2003). The girling of America: Critical reflections on gender and popular communication. Popular Communication, 1(1), 23-31.
(11) Durham, M. G. (2001). Adolescents, the Internet, and the politics of gender: A feminist case analysis. Race, Gender & Class, 20-41.
(12) Durham, M. G. (2011). Body matters: Resuscitating the corporeal in a new media environment. Feminist Media Studies, 11(01), 53-60.
(13) Oates, T. P., & Durham, M. G. (2004). The mismeasure of masculinity: the male body,‘race’and power in the enumerative discourses of the NFL draft. Patterns of Prejudice, 38(3), 301-320.
(15) Race and Gender Speaker Series with Meenakshi Gigi Durham. (2012, April). Retrieved February 22, 2017, from https://www.mtmercy.edu/news-events/event/2012/04/25/race-and-gender-speaker-series-meenakshi-gigi-durham OK -- NOTARIETY
(16) Durham, Meenakshi G. (1990). Is it all in the telling?: A study of the role of text schemas and schematic text structures in the recall and comprehension of printed news stories (Ph.D. thesis). University of Florida. OCLC 49246593.
(17) Durham, M. (n.d.). LinkedIn: Meenakshi Durham. Retrieved February 21, 2017, from https://www.linkedin.com/in/meenakshi-durham-4a9b31ab
(18) Meenakshi Durham Wikipedia Page LINK?
GOOD LIST OF CITATIONS, BUT NOT IN APA FORMAT
Outline
[edit]'History/Background —You should attempt to include: —Birthplace
- ?
--Colleges/universities attended
- University of Florida (16) Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Mass Communication/Media Studies 1985-1990 (17)
- Louisiana State University. Master of Journalism, Journalism and Mass Communication. 1984 – 1985 (17)
- University of West Florida. Bachelor of Arts (B.A.), Communication Arts, Magna cum laude. 1982 – 1984 (17)
- Women's Christian College. Bachelor of Science (B.Sc.), Chemistry, with Math and Physics minors, First Class. 1977 – 1980 (17)
Ph.D. in [degree], from [university attended]
- Earned PhD at University of Florida In 1990 (16)
Currently at [university]
- Professor (jointly appointed in SJMC WHAT DOES THIS STAND FOR? and Gender, Women’s, and Sexuality Studies); Faculty Fellow, Office of the Vice President for Research & Economic Development; former Associate Faculty * Director of the Obermann Center for Advanced Studies; member of the board of directors for the Project on Rhetoric of Inquiry. (1)
Meenakshi Gigi Durham is Associate Professor of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Iowa. Correspondence to: School of Journalism and Mass Communication (14) LOOKS LIKE A CUT AND PASTE, WHICH COULD BE INTERPRETED AS PLAGIARISM
Teaches courses: DON'T REALLY NEED THIS SECTION
- JMC:3415 Writing Across Cultures
- JMC:6220 Critical Cultural Theories in Media and Communication
- JMC:3410 Magazine Reporting & Writing
- JMC:2010 Journalistic Reporting & Writing
- JMC:3175 Gender and Mass Media
- JMC:6320 Qualitative Research Methods for Media and Communication (1)
Scholarly work
Main focus of research
- representations of gender and sexuality in the media, with a particular focus on the politics of the body, the intersections of race, class and gender, and youth cultures. (1)
Highlight one key, noteworthy research publication or idea (1) ??
Other contributions
Critical Studies in Media Communication, Communication Theory, and Feminist Media Studies. She is the author of The Lolita Effect (Overlook, 2008) and the co-editor, with Douglas M. Kellner, of Media and Cultural Studies: KeyWorks (Blackwell, 2001, rev. 2006). Her work has earned her widespread public recognition, including media appearances on the BBC, Irish National Television, Iowa Public Radio, Illinois Public Radio, The Dr. Phil Show, and the documentary "Miss Representation," which was aired on the Oprah Winfrey Network.
She serves on the editorial boards of a number of scholarly journals. Her essay, "Grieving," published in the Harvard Review in 2010, was selected for inclusion in the 2011 Best American Essays anthology. She received a Faculty Scholar Award from The University of Iowa. In 2013, she was awarded a faculty administrative fellowship in the UI's Office of the Vice President for Research and Economic Development. She was the 2014 recipient of the International Communication Association's Teresa Award, the Feminist Scholarship Division's highest award for achievement in research.(17) GOOD.
Journal editor
In 2010 her essay “Grieving,” was published by the Harvard Review, and was selected for publication in the 2011 Best American Essays anthology. (15)
Awards/honors
Awards (1)
- Honors Thesis Mentor Award 2015
University of Iowa Honors Program
- Teresa Award for the Advancement of Feminist Scholarship 2014
Feminist Scholarship Division International Communication Association
- Nominee 2014
Distinguished Achievement Award Celebration of Women University of Iowa
- Collegiate Scholar Award 2012
College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, University of Iowa
- Faculty Scholar Award 2009-2012
Office of the Provost, University of Iowa
- Obermann Scholar Fall 2011, Fall 2006
Obermann Center for Advanced Studies, University of Iowa
- Career Development Award Fall 2006
College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, University of Iowa
- Society for Professional Journalists Chapter Award for
Outstanding Faculty Member 2003 School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Iowa
- Faculty Research Award 1999-2000
College of Communication, University of Texas at Austin
- Academic Excellence Award in Instructional Technology Spring 2000
College of Communication, University of Texas at Austin
CLAS Collegiate Scholar in 2012 (17) WHAT DOES THIS MEAN?
Further readings WHAT ABOUT JOURNAL ARTICLES AS WELL?
* Books: (18)
- Durham, Meenakshi G. (1990). Is it all in the telling?: A study of the role of text schemas and schematic text structures in the recall and comprehension of printed news stories (Ph.D. thesis). University of Florida. OCLC 49246593.
- Durham, Meenakshi G. (2009). The Lolita effect: the media sexualization of young girls and what we can do about it (2nd ed.). Woodstock, New York: Overlook Press. ISBN 9781590205945.
See also: Lolita and the sexualization of childhood. Pajamas Media. Retrieved 19 July 2013.
- Durham, Meenakshi G.; Kellner, Douglas M. (2012). Media and cultural studies: keyworks. Malden, Massachusetts: Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 9780470658086.
- Durham, Meenakshi G. TechnoSex: technologies of the body, mediated corporealities, and the quest for the sexual self. Under contract with University of Michigan Press.
* Book Chapters: (18) NEED PROPER CITATION
- Durham, Meenakshi G. (1999), "Out of the Indian diaspora: mass media, femininity, and adolescence between two cultures", in Mazzarella, Sharon; Pecora, Norma O., Growing up girls: popular culture and the construction of identity (third ed.), New York: Peter Lang, pp. 193–208, ISBN 9780820440217.
- Durham, Meenakshi G. (2002), "Girls, media, and the negotiation of sexuality: a study of race, class and gender in adolescent girls' peer groups", in Williams, Christine; Stein, Arlene, Sexuality and gender, Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell, pp. 304–320, ISBN 9780631222729.
- Durham, Meenakshi G. (2007), "Myths of race and beauty in teen magazines: a semiological analysis", in Creedon, Pamela J.; Cramer, Judith, Women in mass communication (3rd ed.), Thousand Oaks, California: Sage, pp. 233–246, ISBN 9781412936958.
- Durham, Meenakshi G. (2007), "Sex in the transnational city: discourses of gender, body and nation in the "New Bollywood"", in Creekmur, Corey; Sidel, Mark, Cinema, law, and the state in Asia, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 45–62, ISBN 9781403977519.
- Durham, Meenakshi G. (2009), "Ethnic chic and the displacement of South Asian female sexuality in U.S. media", in Hammer, Rhonda; Kellner, Douglas, Media/cultural studies: critical approaches, New York: Peter Lang, pp. 501–515, ISBN 9780820495262.
- Durham, Meenakshi G. (2011), "Constructing the "new ethnicities": media, sexuality and diaspora identity in the lives of South Asian immigrant girls", in Dines, Gail; Humez, Jean, Gender, race, and class in media: a critical reader, Thousand Oaks, California: Sage, pp. 389–398, ISBN 9781412974417.
- Durham, Meenakshi G. (2012), "Girls, media, and the negotiation of sexuality: a study of race, class and gender in adolescent girls' peer groups", in Shaw, Susan; Lee, Janet, Women's voices, feminist visions: classic and contemporary readings (fifth ed.), New York: McGraw-Hill, ISBN 9780073512327.
- Durham, Meenakshi G. (2013), "Chapter 8 Body matters: resuscitating the corporeal in a new media environment", in Carter, Cynthia; McLaughlin, Lisa, Current perspectives in feminist media studies, London New York: Routledge, ISBN 9780415540117.
- Durham, Meenakshi G. (2013), "Children's technologized bodies: mapping mixed reality.", in Lemish, Dafna, The Routledge international handbook of children, adolescents and media, London New York: Routledge, pp. 156–164, ISBN 9780415783682.
References
(1) School of Journalism & Mass Communication. (2017, January 11). Retrieved February 16, 2017, from https://clas.uiowa.edu/sjmc/people/meenakshi-gigi-durham
(15) Race and Gender Speaker Series with Meenakshi Gigi Durham. (2012, April). Retrieved February 22, 2017, from https://www.mtmercy.edu/news-events/event/2012/04/25/race-and-gender-speaker-series-meenakshi-gigi-durham
(16) Durham, Meenakshi G. (1990). Is it all in the telling?: A study of the role of text schemas and schematic text structures in the recall and comprehension of printed news stories (Ph.D. thesis). University of Florida. OCLC 49246593.
(17) Durham, M. (n.d.). LinkedIn: Meenakshi Durham. Retrieved February 21, 2017, from https://www.linkedin.com/in/meenakshi-durham-4a9b31ab
(14) Durham, M. G. (2004, June). Constructing the “New Ethnicities”: Media, Sexuality, and Diaspora Identity in the Lives of South Asian Immigrant Girls. Retrieved February 16, 2017, from http://www.csun.edu/~vcspc00g/301/newethnicities-csmc.pdf
(18) Meenakshi Durham Wikipedia Page
— Preceding unsigned comment added by Jafrah (talk • contribs) 01:18, 21 February 2017 (UTC)