Research Overview

My scholarship, informed by feminist theory, critical masculinities, and decolonial approaches, moves across three interconnected research areas: everyday feminisms, digital selfhood and memory, and digital labour platforms in the future of work. that help analyse how gendered norms are reproduced, resisted, and reworked in everyday life.

Everyday feminisms: Explores feminist micropolitics and its emergence through daily practices, relationships, and cultural expressions. I study feminist mothering, everyday negotiations of gender, feminist memes and humour.

Digital selfhood, memory, and representation: Includes work on digital self-representation, the social life of images, and practices such as posthumous selfie-memory making. Here, I explore how identity, visibility, and memory are shaped through mediated forms of presence and absence.

Digital labour platforms and the future of work: Examines platform-mediated reorganisation of work relations, identity, dignity, and value, and how workers negotiate agency within algorithmic cultures, including through informal networks of care and resistance, such as whisper networks. Drawing on feminist and decolonial approaches, I ask how we might imagine more just and humane technological futures.