Media and Communication
Open Access Journal ISSN: 2183-2439

Submit Abstract to Issue:

Influence and Visibility in Gendered Public Spheres

Academic Editors: Stefan Wallaschek (Europa-Universität Flensburg) and Mareike Fenja Bauer (Europa-Universität Viadrina Frankfurt – Oder)

Submission of Abstracts
1-15 January 2026
Submission of Full Papers
1-15 May 2026
Publication of the Issue
January/June 2027

The thematic issue, titled “Influence and Visibility in Gendered Public Spheres,” aims to shed new light on a topical and crucial area in media and communication studies.

Feminist media studies and gender scholars demonstrate that public spheres are strongly gendered and mirror unequal power relations, hierarchies, and injustices in politics and society. The thematic issue builds upon these crucial theoretical and empirical insights and focuses on the establishment, change, and stabilization of gendered public spheres in various communication contexts. It thus includes key questions of who is visible and which frames, ideas, and narratives are present as well as how influential are certain actors, frames, and discourses in gendered public spheres. The thematic issue shall offer new theoretical and empirical insights into the relationship between visibility and influence in gendered public spheres.

Hence, the thematic issue can cover the following topics:

  • Fragmentation and polarization of public spheres and how gender dynamics come into play;
  • The role of social media in shaping (anti-)gender narratives and fostering (anti-)feminist activism;
  • Relevance of specific individual and collective actors (e.g., influencers, politicians, activists, and organizations) within public spheres, with a focus on the dynamics of influence and visibility;
  • Conflicts and coalitions on the actor and ideational level in gendered public spheres;
  • Cross-national comparisons of how gendered public spheres are constructed via global (anti-)gender movements;
  • Disinformation and fake-news attacking gender studies and targeting gender equality.

We invite authors to address these topics from theoretical and empirical perspectives. Scholars can be situated in different disciplines to spur an interdisciplinary debate on the subject. Qualitative and quantitative as well as mixed and multi-method approaches are very welcome.

Authors interested in submitting a paper for this issue are asked to consult the journal's instructions for authors and submit their abstracts (maximum of 250 words, with a tentative title) through the abstracts system (here). When submitting their abstracts, authors are also asked to confirm that they are aware that Media and Communication is an open access journal with a publishing fee if the article is accepted for publication after peer-review (corresponding authors affiliated with our institutional members do not incur this fee).

Readers across the globe will be able to access, share, and download this issue entirely for free. Corresponding authors affiliated with any of our institutional members (over 90 institutions worldwide) publish free of charge. Otherwise, an article processing fee will be charged to the authors to cover editorial costs. We defend that authors should not have to personally pay this fee and encourage them to check with their institutions if funds are available to cover open access publication costs. Further information about the journal's open access charges can be found here.

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