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{{short description|American rhetorician}}
{{short description|American rhetorician}}
{{multiple issues|{{BLP primary sources|date=June 2017}}
{{multiple issues|{{BLP primary sources|date=June 2017}}
{{BLP sources|date=June 2017}}
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{{Infobox academic
{{Infobox academic
| honorific_prefix =
| honorific_prefix =
| name = Joan Faber McAlister
| name = Joan Faber McAlister
| honorific_suffix = <!--{{post-nominals|}}-->
| honorific_suffix = <!--{{post-nominals|}}-->
| image = <!-- filename only, no "File:" or "Image:" prefix, and no enclosing [[brackets]] -->
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| birth_name = <!-- only use if different from name above -->
| birth_name = <!-- only use if different from name above -->
| birth_date = <!-- {{birth date and age|YYYY|MM|DD|df=yes}} for living people supply only the year with {{Birth year and age|YYYY}} unless the exact date is already widely published, as per [[WP:DOB]]. For people who have died, use {{Birth date|YYYY|MM|DD|df=yes}} -->
| birth_date = <!-- {{birth date and age|YYYY|MM|DD|df=yes}} for living people supply only the year with {{Birth year and age|YYYY}} unless the exact date is already widely published, as per [[WP:DOB]]. For people who have died, use {{Birth date|YYYY|MM|DD|df=yes}} -->
| birth_place = [[Cedar Rapids, Iowa|Cedar Rapids]], [[Iowa]], U.S.
| birth_place = [[Cedar Rapids, Iowa|Cedar Rapids]], [[Iowa]], U.S.
| death_date = <!-- {{Death date and age|YYYY|MM|DD|YYYY|MM|DD|df=yes}} (death date then birth date) -->
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| education = Ph.D. in [[rhetorical studies]]
| education = Ph.D. in [[rhetorical studies]]
| alma_mater = [[University of Iowa]]
| alma_mater = [[University of Iowa]]
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| thesis_year = 2005
| thesis_year = 2005
| occupation = Educator, researcher, writer
| occupation = Educator, researcher, writer
| years_active =
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}}
}}
'''Joan Faber McAlister''' is an American rhetorician, associate professor and researcher of [[women's studies]] in communication. Her research primarily focuses on how images and space communicate messages in public culture through perceptions of beauty and [[critical theory]].<ref name="DrakeMerritt"/> From 2014 until 2017, McAlister served as the editor of ''[[Women's Studies in Communication]]''.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=McAlister|first=Joan Faber|date=2014-09-02|title=The Past and Future of Feminist Communication Scholarship in WSIC|url=https://doi.org/10.1080/07491409.2014.955424|journal=Women's Studies in Communication|volume=37|issue=3|pages=243–245|doi=10.1080/07491409.2014.955424|s2cid=144726741|issn=0749-1409}}</ref>
'''Joan Faber McAlister''' is an American [[rhetoric]]ian, associate professor and researcher of [[women's studies]] in communication. Her research primarily focuses on how images and space communicate messages in public culture through perceptions of [[beauty]] and [[critical theory]].<ref name="DrakeMerritt"/> From 2014 until 2017, McAlister served as the editor of ''[[Women's Studies in Communication]]''.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=McAlister|first=Joan Faber|date=2014-09-02|title=The Past and Future of Feminist Communication Scholarship in WSIC|url=https://doi.org/10.1080/07491409.2014.955424|journal=Women's Studies in Communication|volume=37|issue=3|pages=243–245|doi=10.1080/07491409.2014.955424|s2cid=144726741|issn=0749-1409}}</ref>


=={{anchor|History and background|birthplace|Colleges/universities attended}}Education and career==
=={{anchor|History and background|birthplace|Colleges/universities attended}}Education and career==
Joan Faber McAlister attended [[Boise State University]], from which she received a B.A. in anthropology<ref name="DrakeBio" /> in 1994 with an emphasis in cultural studies and [[ethnography]]. In 1996{{citation needed|date=March 2018}}, she completed her M.A. in communication at the same institution.<ref name="DrakeBio" /> Faber received her Ph.D. in [[rhetorical studies]] from the [[University of Iowa]].<ref>{{Cite thesis|title=No place like home: the American crisis of community and the renovation of suburban space at the end of the twentieth century|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/71358280|date=2005|language=English|first=Joan Faber|last=McAlister|oclc = 71358280}}</ref>
Joan Faber McAlister attended [[Boise State University]], from which she received a B.A. in [[anthropology]]<ref name="DrakeBio" /> in 1994 with an emphasis in [[cultural studies]] and [[ethnography]]; she completed her M.A. in communication at the same institution. Faber received her Ph.D. in [[rhetorical studies]] from the [[University of Iowa]].<ref>{{Cite thesis|title=No place like home: the American crisis of community and the renovation of suburban space at the end of the twentieth century|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/71358280|date=2005|language=English|first=Joan Faber|last=McAlister|oclc = 71358280}}</ref>


From 2014 until 2017, McAlister served as the editor-in-chief of the journal ''Women's Studies in Communication''.<ref>{{Cite web|title=ORWAC {{!}} Editors of WSIC|url=http://www.orwac.org/aws/ORWAC/pt/sp/about_editors|access-date=2022-02-12|website=www.orwac.org}}</ref><ref name="DrakeEditor">{{Cite web|date=2014-04-28|title=Joan Faber McAlister named editor of Women's Studies in Communication|url=http://news.drake.edu/2014/04/28/joan-faber-mcalister-named-editor-of-womens-studies-in-communication/|access-date=2018-03-09|website=Newsroom {{!}} Drake University|publisher=Drake University|location=Des Moines, Iowa}}</ref>
From 2014 until 2017, McAlister served as the editor-in-chief of the journal ''[[Women's Studies in Communication]]''.<ref>{{Cite web|title=ORWAC {{!}} Editors of WSIC|url=http://www.orwac.org/aws/ORWAC/pt/sp/about_editors|access-date=2022-02-12|website=www.orwac.org}}</ref><ref name="DrakeEditor">{{Cite web|date=2014-04-28|title=Joan Faber McAlister named editor of Women's Studies in Communication|url=http://news.drake.edu/2014/04/28/joan-faber-mcalister-named-editor-of-womens-studies-in-communication/|access-date=2018-03-09|website=Newsroom {{!}} Drake University|publisher=Drake University|location=Des Moines, Iowa}}</ref> In 2023 she was a member of the Editorial Board.<ref>[https://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?show=editorialBoard&journalCode=uwsc20 Taylor and Francis website, ''Women's Studies in Communication: Editorial Board'']</ref>


As of 2022, she is an associate professor of communication at [[Drake University]] in [[Des Moines, Iowa]].
As of 2022, she is an associate professor of communication at [[Drake University]] in [[Des Moines, Iowa]].


==Scholarly work==
==Scholarly work==
McAlister's research focuses primarily on how images and space communicate messages in public culture through perceptions of beauty and [[critical theory]].<ref name="DrakeMerritt">{{Cite web|url=http://news.drake.edu/2016/11/21/qa-with-joan-faber-mcalister-recipient-of-the-2016-francine-merritt-award/|title=Q&A with Joan Faber McAlister, recipient of the 2016 Francine Merritt Award|date=2016-11-21|website=Newsroom {{!}} Drake University|publisher=Drake University|location=Des Moines, Iowa|access-date=2017-04-25}}</ref> Her research uses critical theory to confront ideological, societal, and structural binds found in culture and literature. McAlister focuses on analyzing topics including Congressional hearings, popular films, national news coverage, magazine advertisements, reality television, urban planning, and architecture.<ref name="NowRetreat">{{Cite web|url=http://www.nowretreat.com/webinars/|title=NOW Retreat : Webinars|website=www.nowretreat.com|date=2016-07-10|access-date=2017-04-25|archive-url=https://archive.today/20180309235145/http://www.nowretreat.com/webinars/|archive-date=2018-03-09|url-status=live}}</ref> She approaches these documents with a focus on the relationship between social location and rhetoric, i.e.: how different individuals are placed in power and how the factors of class, gender, race, and sexuality impact these individuals.<ref name="DrakeMerritt" /> Her research is concerned with the different factors that impact cultural performance and create a sense of belonging that could have detrimental outcomes. She focuses on the concept of "home" being more than just a physical location.<ref name="DrakeBio">{{Cite web|url=http://www.drake.edu/scs/facultystaff/joanfabermcalister/|title=Joan Faber McAlister – Drake University|website=www.drake.edu|language=en|publisher=Drake University|location=Des Moines, Iowa|date=2016|access-date=2017-04-25}}</ref> McAlister has stated that home is "about relationships between you and your environment [...] between your desires and your limitations [...and] associations between regional identities and cultures."<ref name="DrakeMerritt"/>
McAlister's research focuses primarily on how images and space communicate messages in [[Public Culture|public culture]] through perceptions of beauty and [[critical theory]].<ref name="DrakeMerritt">{{Cite web|url=http://news.drake.edu/2016/11/21/qa-with-joan-faber-mcalister-recipient-of-the-2016-francine-merritt-award/|title=Q&A with Joan Faber McAlister, recipient of the 2016 Francine Merritt Award|date=2016-11-21|website=Newsroom {{!}} Drake University|publisher=Drake University|location=Des Moines, Iowa|access-date=2017-04-25}}</ref> Her research uses critical theory to confront ideological, societal, and structural binds found in culture and literature. McAlister focuses on analyzing topics including [[United States congressional hearing|Congressional hearings]], popular films, national news coverage, magazine advertisements, [[reality television]], [[urban planning]], and [[architecture]].<ref name="NowRetreat">{{Cite web|url=http://www.nowretreat.com/webinars/|title=NOW Retreat : Webinars|website=www.nowretreat.com|date=2016-07-10|access-date=2017-04-25|archive-url=https://archive.today/20180309235145/http://www.nowretreat.com/webinars/|archive-date=2018-03-09|url-status=live}}</ref> She approaches these documents with a focus on the relationship between [[Social position|social location]] and rhetoric, i.e.: how different individuals are placed in power and how the factors of [[Social class|class]], gender, [[Race and ethnicity in the United States census|race]], and [[Human sexuality|sexuality]] impact these individuals.<ref name="DrakeMerritt" /> Her research is concerned with the different factors that impact cultural performance and create a sense of belonging that could have detrimental outcomes. She focuses on the concept of "home" being more than just a physical location.<ref name="DrakeBio">{{Cite web|url=http://www.drake.edu/scs/facultystaff/joanfabermcalister/|title=Joan Faber McAlister – Drake University|website=www.drake.edu|language=en|publisher=Drake University|location=Des Moines, Iowa|date=2016|access-date=2017-04-25}}</ref> McAlister has stated that home is "about relationships between you and your environment [...] between your desires and your limitations [...and] associations between regional identities and cultures."<ref name="DrakeMerritt"/>


==={{anchor|Collecting the Gaze: Memory, Agency, and Kinship in the Women's Jail Museum, Johannesburg}}''Collecting the Gaze''===
==={{anchor|Collecting the Gaze: Memory, Agency, and Kinship in the Women's Jail Museum, Johannesburg}}''Collecting the Gaze''===
McAlister's essay ''Collecting the Gaze: Memory, Agency, and Kinship in the Women's Jail Museum, Johannesburg'' discusses the views of [[Walter Benjamin]] in the Women's Jail Museum in Johannesburg, South Africa. Benjamin was a German-Jewish philosopher who died in 1940 at the Women's Jail while avoiding deportation to either a French concentration camp or to Nazi Germany.<ref name="McAlisterCollecting">{{Cite journal|last=McAlister|first=Joan Faber|date=2013-02-01|title=Collecting the Gaze: Memory, Agency, and Kinship in the Women's Jail Museum, Johannesburg|journal=[[Women's Studies in Communication]]|volume=36|issue=1|pages=1–27|doi=10.1080/07491409.2012.754389|s2cid=143691953|issn=0749-1409}}</ref> The Women's Jail is now a site that rests on the grounds of a former racially segregated prison that was in use from 1020{{clarify|date=March 2018|should this be 1920?}} to 1983, during which [[apartheid]] laws sought to assure the dominance of white people. Those who resisted often faced repercussions, drawing a parallel between the Women's Jail and a Nazi regime. The Women's Jail holds visible memories of former inmates, directing the tourists' gaze through haunting collections of personal items such as newspaper clippings. Benjamin's collection often included very personal items such as wedding photographs, shoes, and quotes that were placed where women had once lived and worked, to present more depth into their personal experiences.<ref name="McAlisterCollecting" />
McAlister's essay ''Collecting the Gaze: Memory, Agency, and Kinship in the Women's Jail Museum, Johannesburg'' discusses the views of [[Walter Benjamin]] in the Women's Jail Museum in [[Johannesburg|Johannesburg, South Africa]]. Benjamin was a [[German Jewish|German-Jewish]] philosopher who died in 1940 at the Women's Jail while avoiding [[deportation]] to either a [[French language|French]] [[Internment|concentration camp]] or to [[Nazi Germany]].<ref name="McAlisterCollecting">{{Cite journal|last=McAlister|first=Joan Faber|date=2013-02-01|title=Collecting the Gaze: Memory, Agency, and Kinship in the Women's Jail Museum, Johannesburg|journal=[[Women's Studies in Communication]]|volume=36|issue=1|pages=1–27|doi=10.1080/07491409.2012.754389|s2cid=143691953|issn=0749-1409}}</ref> The Women's Jail is now a site that rests on the grounds of a former [[Racial segregation|racially segregated]] prison that was in use from 1910<ref>[https://www.constitutionhill.org.za/sites/site-womens-jail Constitutional Hill website, ''The Women's Jail'']</ref> to 1983, during which [[apartheid]] laws sought to assure the dominance of white people. Those who resisted often faced repercussions, drawing a parallel between the Women's Jail and a Nazi regime. The Women's Jail holds visible memories of former inmates, directing the tourists' gaze through haunting collections of personal items such as newspaper clippings. Benjamin's collection often included very personal items such as wedding photographs, shoes, and quotes that were placed where women had once lived and worked, to present more depth into their personal experiences.<ref name="McAlisterCollecting" />


McAlister then discusses how feminist critics of visual and public memories have concerns about the use of the gaze and the ability it has to change subjects into objects that then create a uniform story. The [[male gaze]], in feminist theory, is associated with objectifying, defining, and exploiting females into objects for sexual pleasure to be viewed. The "tourist gaze" is a way of viewing culture as a commodity and can shift tragic sites of trauma into a site that offers pleasure at the expense of others' pain, often with a consumerist goal.<ref name="McAlisterCollecting" /> McAlister discusses how the gaze of visual and memorial culture causes concern about re-establishing hierarchical systems of race, class, gender, and sexuality that construct identities either through places of public memory or through the objectification of females. She also discusses how the Women's Jail displays the daily life of the prisoners such as the humiliating conditions that menstruating inmates were forced to live through. This includes exhibits detailing how inmates were not allowed to wear undergarments and were forced to push their thighs together or utilize shoelaces to hold pads in place while working.<ref name="McAlisterCollecting" /> This shows the notable difference between the experiences of female and male prisoners which provides visitors with a different gaze into the particular details of daily life while being incarcerated. McAlister's article discusses how the Women's Jail asks visitors to share the responsibility to collect and preserve the past in order to change views of both the past and the future.
McAlister then discusses how [[Feminism|feminist]] critics of visual and public memories have concerns about the use of the gaze and the ability it has to change subjects into objects that then create a uniform story. The [[male gaze]], in feminist theory, is associated with objectifying, defining, and exploiting females into objects for sexual pleasure to be viewed. The "[[Tourism|tourist]] gaze" is a way of viewing culture as a commodity and can shift tragic sites of trauma into a site that offers pleasure at the expense of others' pain, often with a [[consumerist]] goal.<ref name="McAlisterCollecting" /> McAlister discusses how the gaze of visual and memorial culture causes concern about re-establishing hierarchical systems of race, class, gender, and sexuality that construct identities either through places of [[Collective memory|public memory]] or through the objectification of females. She also discusses how the Women's Jail displays the daily life of the prisoners such as the humiliating conditions that [[Menstrual cycle|menstruating]] inmates were forced to live through. This includes exhibits detailing how inmates were not allowed to wear undergarments and were forced to push their thighs together or utilize shoelaces to hold [[Menstrual pad|pads]] in place while working.<ref name="McAlisterCollecting" /> This shows the notable difference between the experiences of female and male prisoners which provides visitors with a different gaze into the particular details of daily life while being incarcerated. McAlister's article discusses how the Women's Jail asks visitors to share the responsibility to collect and preserve the past in order to change views of both the past and the future.


==={{anchor|Lives of the Mind/Body: Alarming Notes on the Tenure and Biological Clocks}}''Lives of the Mind/Body''===
==={{anchor|Lives of the Mind/Body: Alarming Notes on the Tenure and Biological Clocks}}''Lives of the Mind/Body''===
McAlister's article ''Lives of the Mind/Body: Alarming Notes on the Tenure and Biological Clocks'' seeks to draw attention to the [[Age and female fertility|biological clocks]] that women are encouraged to constantly worry about throughout their careers.<ref name="McAlisterLives">{{Cite journal|last=McAlister|first=Joan Faber|date=2008-07-01|title=Lives of the Mind/Body: Alarming Notes on the Tenure and Biological Clocks|journal=[[Women's Studies in Communication]]|volume=31|issue=2|pages=218–225|doi=10.1080/07491409.2008.10162536|s2cid=145741939|issn=0749-1409}}</ref> It discusses the idea that women are torn between achieving academically, as in McAlister's situation, and keeping reproductive "expiration dates" to themselves. The article says that, if women pay too much attention to their biological clocks in order to begin a family, they will seemingly struggle to stay at the same pace as their male colleagues. McAlister discusses her fear that bringing children into her life would cause her to be viewed as feminine and motherly which would contradict her outward professional persona as a scholar.<ref name="McAlisterLives" /> She notes that having children was often viewed as being uncommitted to academic work by her male colleagues who were published or more revered. It was only after discussing this dilemma with her advisor, a well-established scholar, that McAlister decided to have children.
McAlister's article ''Lives of the Mind/Body: Alarming Notes on the Tenure and Biological Clocks'' seeks to draw attention to the [[Age and female fertility|biological clocks]] that women are encouraged to constantly worry about throughout their careers.<ref name="McAlisterLives">{{Cite journal|last=McAlister|first=Joan Faber|date=2008-07-01|title=Lives of the Mind/Body: Alarming Notes on the Tenure and Biological Clocks|journal=[[Women's Studies in Communication]]|volume=31|issue=2|pages=218–225|doi=10.1080/07491409.2008.10162536|s2cid=145741939|issn=0749-1409}}</ref> It discusses the idea that women are torn between achieving academically, as in McAlister's situation, and keeping [[Reproductive system|reproductive]] "expiration dates" to themselves. The article says that, if women pay too much attention to their biological clocks in order to begin a family, they will seemingly struggle to stay at the same pace as their male colleagues. McAlister discusses her fear that bringing children into her life would cause her to be viewed as [[Femininity|feminine]] and motherly which would contradict her outward professional persona as a scholar.<ref name="McAlisterLives" /> She notes that having children was often viewed as being uncommitted to academic work by her male colleagues who were published or more revered. It was only after discussing this dilemma with her advisor, a well-established scholar, that McAlister decided to have children.


While she continued to pursue a tenured position, McAlister found that she needed to keep her bodily connections with her babies private. For example, she discusses hiding in a corner of a conference room to prepare for her "job talk" when in fact she needed time to breast pump. She discusses how asking for time for this specific task would have made her seem potentially less fit for the position she was ultimately offered.<ref name="McAlisterLives" /> The article also discusses the biological-clock point-of-view in McAlister's missing many "firsts" from first steps to first words while working on her dissertation and pursuing her scholarly goals. The article concludes by underlining the need to draw attention to how scholarly discourse is gendered and requires more discussion on what defines productivity.
While she continued to pursue a tenured position, McAlister found that she needed to keep her bodily connections with her babies private. For example, she discusses hiding in a corner of a conference room to prepare for her "job talk" when in fact she needed time to [[breast pump]]. She discusses how asking for time for this specific task would have made her seem potentially less fit for the position she was ultimately offered.<ref name="McAlisterLives" /> The article also discusses the biological-clock point-of-view in McAlister's missing many "firsts" from first steps to first words while working on her dissertation and pursuing her scholarly goals. The article concludes by underlining the need to draw attention to how scholarly [[discourse]] is gendered and requires more discussion on what defines [[productivity]].


== Personal life ==
== Personal life ==
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==Selected publications==
==Selected publications==
*{{Cite journal|last=McAlister|first=Joan Faber|date=2008-07-01|title=Lives of the Mind/Body: Alarming Notes on the Tenure and Biological Clocks|journal=[[Women's Studies in Communication]]|volume=31|issue=2|pages=218–225|doi=10.1080/07491409.2008.10162536|s2cid=145741939|issn=0749-1409}}
* {{Cite journal|last=McAlister|first=Joan Faber|date=2008-07-01|title=Lives of the Mind/Body: Alarming Notes on the Tenure and Biological Clocks|journal=[[Women's Studies in Communication]]|volume=31|issue=2|pages=218–225|doi=10.1080/07491409.2008.10162536|s2cid=145741939|issn=0749-1409}}
*{{Cite journal|last=McAlister|first=Joan Faber|date=2013-02-01|title=Collecting the Gaze: Memory, Agency, and Kinship in the Women's Jail Museum, Johannesburg|journal=[[Women's Studies in Communication]]|volume=36|issue=1|pages=1–27|doi=10.1080/07491409.2012.754389|s2cid=143691953|issn=0749-1409}}
* {{Cite journal|last=McAlister|first=Joan Faber|title=_ trash in the White House: Michelle Obama, post-racism, and the pre-class politics of domestic style|journal= Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies |volume=6|issue=3 |date=2009|pages=311–315|doi=10.1080/14791420903063844|s2cid=144331165}}
*{{Cite journal|last=McAlister|first=Joan Faber|date=2011-09-01|title=Figural Materialism: Renovating Marriage through the American Family Home|url=https://doi.org/10.1080/10417941003797314|journal=Southern Communication Journal|volume=76|issue=4|pages=279–304|doi=10.1080/10417941003797314|s2cid=143641645|issn=1041-794X}}
* {{Cite journal|last=McAlister|first=Joan Faber|title=Domesticating citizenship: The kairotopics of America's post-9/11 home makeover |journal= Critical Studies in Media Communication|volume= 27|issue=1 |date=2010 |pages=84–104|doi=10.1080/15295030903554391|s2cid=218542606 }}
*{{Cite journal|last=McAlister|first=Joan Faber|title=Domesticating citizenship: The kairotopics of America's post-9/11 home makeover |journal= Critical Studies in Media Communication|volume= 27|issue=1 |date=2010 |pages=84–104|doi=10.1080/15295030903554391|s2cid=218542606 }}
* {{Cite journal|last=McAlister|first=Joan Faber|date=2011-09-01|title=Figural Materialism: Renovating Marriage through the American Family Home|url=https://doi.org/10.1080/10417941003797314|journal=Southern Communication Journal|volume=76|issue=4|pages=279–304|doi=10.1080/10417941003797314|s2cid=143641645|issn=1041-794X}}
*{{Cite journal|last=McAlister|first=Joan Faber|title=_ trash in the White House: Michelle Obama, post-racism, and the pre-class politics of domestic style|journal= Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies |volume=6|issue=3 |pages=311–315|doi=10.1080/14791420903063844|s2cid=144331165}}
* {{Cite journal|last=McAlister|first=Joan Faber|date=2013-02-01|title=Collecting the Gaze: Memory, Agency, and Kinship in the Women's Jail Museum, Johannesburg|journal=[[Women's Studies in Communication]]|volume=36|issue=1|pages=1–27|doi=10.1080/07491409.2012.754389|s2cid=143691953|issn=0749-1409}}


== Awards and honors ==
== Awards and honors ==
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[[Category:People from Cedar Rapids, Iowa]]
[[Category:People from Cedar Rapids, Iowa]]
[[Category:University of Iowa alumni]]
[[Category:University of Iowa alumni]]
[[Category:Women's studies academics]]
[[Category:American academics of women's studies]]
[[Category:American women academics]]
[[Category:American women academics]]
[[Category:21st-century American women]]
[[Category:21st-century American women]]

Latest revision as of 03:04, 10 April 2024

Joan Faber McAlister
Born
Occupation(s)Educator, researcher, writer
Academic background
EducationPh.D. in rhetorical studies
Alma materUniversity of Iowa
ThesisNo place like home : the American crisis of community and the renovation of suburban space at the end of the twentieth century (2005)

Joan Faber McAlister is an American rhetorician, associate professor and researcher of women's studies in communication. Her research primarily focuses on how images and space communicate messages in public culture through perceptions of beauty and critical theory.[1] From 2014 until 2017, McAlister served as the editor of Women's Studies in Communication.[2]

Education and career[edit]

Joan Faber McAlister attended Boise State University, from which she received a B.A. in anthropology[3] in 1994 with an emphasis in cultural studies and ethnography; she completed her M.A. in communication at the same institution. Faber received her Ph.D. in rhetorical studies from the University of Iowa.[4]

From 2014 until 2017, McAlister served as the editor-in-chief of the journal Women's Studies in Communication.[5][6] In 2023 she was a member of the Editorial Board.[7]

As of 2022, she is an associate professor of communication at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa.

Scholarly work[edit]

McAlister's research focuses primarily on how images and space communicate messages in public culture through perceptions of beauty and critical theory.[1] Her research uses critical theory to confront ideological, societal, and structural binds found in culture and literature. McAlister focuses on analyzing topics including Congressional hearings, popular films, national news coverage, magazine advertisements, reality television, urban planning, and architecture.[8] She approaches these documents with a focus on the relationship between social location and rhetoric, i.e.: how different individuals are placed in power and how the factors of class, gender, race, and sexuality impact these individuals.[1] Her research is concerned with the different factors that impact cultural performance and create a sense of belonging that could have detrimental outcomes. She focuses on the concept of "home" being more than just a physical location.[3] McAlister has stated that home is "about relationships between you and your environment [...] between your desires and your limitations [...and] associations between regional identities and cultures."[1]

Collecting the Gaze[edit]

McAlister's essay Collecting the Gaze: Memory, Agency, and Kinship in the Women's Jail Museum, Johannesburg discusses the views of Walter Benjamin in the Women's Jail Museum in Johannesburg, South Africa. Benjamin was a German-Jewish philosopher who died in 1940 at the Women's Jail while avoiding deportation to either a French concentration camp or to Nazi Germany.[9] The Women's Jail is now a site that rests on the grounds of a former racially segregated prison that was in use from 1910[10] to 1983, during which apartheid laws sought to assure the dominance of white people. Those who resisted often faced repercussions, drawing a parallel between the Women's Jail and a Nazi regime. The Women's Jail holds visible memories of former inmates, directing the tourists' gaze through haunting collections of personal items such as newspaper clippings. Benjamin's collection often included very personal items such as wedding photographs, shoes, and quotes that were placed where women had once lived and worked, to present more depth into their personal experiences.[9]

McAlister then discusses how feminist critics of visual and public memories have concerns about the use of the gaze and the ability it has to change subjects into objects that then create a uniform story. The male gaze, in feminist theory, is associated with objectifying, defining, and exploiting females into objects for sexual pleasure to be viewed. The "tourist gaze" is a way of viewing culture as a commodity and can shift tragic sites of trauma into a site that offers pleasure at the expense of others' pain, often with a consumerist goal.[9] McAlister discusses how the gaze of visual and memorial culture causes concern about re-establishing hierarchical systems of race, class, gender, and sexuality that construct identities either through places of public memory or through the objectification of females. She also discusses how the Women's Jail displays the daily life of the prisoners such as the humiliating conditions that menstruating inmates were forced to live through. This includes exhibits detailing how inmates were not allowed to wear undergarments and were forced to push their thighs together or utilize shoelaces to hold pads in place while working.[9] This shows the notable difference between the experiences of female and male prisoners which provides visitors with a different gaze into the particular details of daily life while being incarcerated. McAlister's article discusses how the Women's Jail asks visitors to share the responsibility to collect and preserve the past in order to change views of both the past and the future.

Lives of the Mind/Body[edit]

McAlister's article Lives of the Mind/Body: Alarming Notes on the Tenure and Biological Clocks seeks to draw attention to the biological clocks that women are encouraged to constantly worry about throughout their careers.[11] It discusses the idea that women are torn between achieving academically, as in McAlister's situation, and keeping reproductive "expiration dates" to themselves. The article says that, if women pay too much attention to their biological clocks in order to begin a family, they will seemingly struggle to stay at the same pace as their male colleagues. McAlister discusses her fear that bringing children into her life would cause her to be viewed as feminine and motherly which would contradict her outward professional persona as a scholar.[11] She notes that having children was often viewed as being uncommitted to academic work by her male colleagues who were published or more revered. It was only after discussing this dilemma with her advisor, a well-established scholar, that McAlister decided to have children.

While she continued to pursue a tenured position, McAlister found that she needed to keep her bodily connections with her babies private. For example, she discusses hiding in a corner of a conference room to prepare for her "job talk" when in fact she needed time to breast pump. She discusses how asking for time for this specific task would have made her seem potentially less fit for the position she was ultimately offered.[11] The article also discusses the biological-clock point-of-view in McAlister's missing many "firsts" from first steps to first words while working on her dissertation and pursuing her scholarly goals. The article concludes by underlining the need to draw attention to how scholarly discourse is gendered and requires more discussion on what defines productivity.

Personal life[edit]

McAllister's first child was born stillborn on April 3, 2000. She later had a daughter and twins (one male and one female).[11]

Selected publications[edit]

Awards and honors[edit]

In 2016, McAlister received the Francine Merritt Award for "outstanding contributions to the lives of women in communication"[1] from the National Communication Association.[12]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e "Q&A with Joan Faber McAlister, recipient of the 2016 Francine Merritt Award". Newsroom | Drake University. Des Moines, Iowa: Drake University. 2016-11-21. Retrieved 2017-04-25.
  2. ^ McAlister, Joan Faber (2014-09-02). "The Past and Future of Feminist Communication Scholarship in WSIC". Women's Studies in Communication. 37 (3): 243–245. doi:10.1080/07491409.2014.955424. ISSN 0749-1409. S2CID 144726741.
  3. ^ a b "Joan Faber McAlister – Drake University". www.drake.edu. Des Moines, Iowa: Drake University. 2016. Retrieved 2017-04-25.
  4. ^ McAlister, Joan Faber (2005). No place like home: the American crisis of community and the renovation of suburban space at the end of the twentieth century (Thesis). OCLC 71358280.
  5. ^ "ORWAC | Editors of WSIC". www.orwac.org. Retrieved 2022-02-12.
  6. ^ "Joan Faber McAlister named editor of Women's Studies in Communication". Newsroom | Drake University. Des Moines, Iowa: Drake University. 2014-04-28. Retrieved 2018-03-09.
  7. ^ Taylor and Francis website, Women's Studies in Communication: Editorial Board
  8. ^ "NOW Retreat : Webinars". www.nowretreat.com. 2016-07-10. Archived from the original on 2018-03-09. Retrieved 2017-04-25.
  9. ^ a b c d McAlister, Joan Faber (2013-02-01). "Collecting the Gaze: Memory, Agency, and Kinship in the Women's Jail Museum, Johannesburg". Women's Studies in Communication. 36 (1): 1–27. doi:10.1080/07491409.2012.754389. ISSN 0749-1409. S2CID 143691953.
  10. ^ Constitutional Hill website, The Women's Jail
  11. ^ a b c d McAlister, Joan Faber (2008-07-01). "Lives of the Mind/Body: Alarming Notes on the Tenure and Biological Clocks". Women's Studies in Communication. 31 (2): 218–225. doi:10.1080/07491409.2008.10162536. ISSN 0749-1409. S2CID 145741939.
  12. ^ "Women's Caucus". National Communication Association. 2016-10-17. Retrieved 2022-02-12.

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