Marie Anderson, a 2023 graduate from the South 啵啵直播秀 State University School of Communication and Journalism, is the 2024 recipient of the Outstanding Thesis 啵啵直播秀 from the Organization for the Study of Communication, Language and Gender.
The Organization for the Study of Communication, Language and Gender grew from a set of interdisciplinary conferences in 1978 at Bowling Green State University in Ohio. Now it provides opportunities to present research, showcase creative projects and discuss various areas of communication related to language and gender.
According to the organization鈥檚 website, award nominees need to have results and discussion in their theses that 鈥渋nterrogate and offer insights about gender as well as advance our understanding of gendered ways of communicating.鈥
Anderson鈥檚 research project, 鈥淔ighting for What is Right: A Rhetorical Analysis of the Fan Campaign to Save 鈥楢nne with an E鈥 from Cancellation,鈥 focuses on the implications of advocacy for the TV show 鈥淎nne with an E鈥 using a series of billboard advertisements from a fan campaign following the show鈥檚 cancellation in 2019.
鈥淲hen the television show 鈥楢nne with an E鈥 was canceled, I was fascinated by the way that the show鈥檚 online fandom utilized social media to rally for another season,鈥 Anderson explained. 鈥淚 was especially struck by how the messaging of their campaign, which was being spearheaded mainly by young women and girls, went beyond discussions of entertainment to include deeper messages about their belief in the importance of representation of minorities and social issues. Through my research, I wanted to explore the construction of their rhetorical message and its implications for youth and women-led advocacy.鈥
Anderson continued, 鈥淥ne of the biggest takeaways from this research was that just as advocates for social change can come in many shapes and sizes, so can the ways in which they advocate.
鈥淎ctions society has deemed unsubstantial can have a rhetorical impact. Another major takeaway was that the value of media representation stems not from whether a production company finds it lucrative, but from what it means to the audience.鈥
Anderson鈥檚 faculty advisor, School of Communication and Journalism Associate Academic Director Rebecca Kuehl, had high praises for Anderson鈥檚 work.
鈥淭he thesis offers insightful implications regarding how fan-based social movement rhetoric can advance our understandings of the intersection of gender and communication, and how some gender-based issues 鈥 such as sexual assault and censorship of girls and women 鈥 are unfortunately timeless,鈥 Kuehl said. 鈥淚t truly was a joy to advise Ms. Marie Anderson as she wrote this important thesis centered on language, gender, and the communication strategies of fan-based social movements in popular culture.鈥
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