'This special issue aims to generate new ways of theorizing social movement histories, using the critical lens of remediation. An interdisciplinary concept, remediation offers an ideal approach for considering social movement histories because it allows insights into the complex ebbs and flows of social and political change, in ways that avoid overly simplistic narratives of progress, loss, return, backlash, or cooptation. Remediation lets us think about the ways in which media production emerging out of identity-based social movements is a form of activism and, as such, as Bolter and Grusin put it, help shape and reform reality (56). The contributors to this special issue examine media ranging from print (life writing; novels; magazines; letters; newsletters; and other ephemera) to visual and audiovisual (music; movies; and television) to digital materials (BBS; online archives), arguing that these media forms, in the hands of activist media makers and/or members of marginalized identity groups, play a key role in helping to shape and document social movements, build coalitions and create interventions into wider social spheres often unsympathetic to the issues faced by people who face discrimination on the basis of gender, race, sexuality, ability, carceral status and/or HIV status. The essays in this volume productively expand upon, extend and critique understandings of remediation as elaborated within media and cultural studies.. (Introduction)
2018 pg. 42-51