ϲ

Skip navigation

Dr Melanie Waters

Assistant Professor

Department: Humanities

Melanie Waters studied at Newcastle University (BA, Ma, PhD) and joined ϲ in 2008. She is currently Co-Investigator on the AHRC-funded project Liberating Histories: Women's Movement Magazines, Media Activism and Periodical Pedagogies (2022-2025), which analyses feminist periodical culture in the UK from 1968 to the present day. Her publications include Feminism and Popular Culture: Investigating the Postfeminist Mystique (New York: Rutgers University Press, 2014); Women on Screen: Feminism and Femininity in Visual Culture (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2011); articles in Textual Practice, Modern Fiction Studies, Women: A Cultural Review, and Critical Survey; and, as editor, the special issue Feminist Periodical Culture: From Suffrage to Second Wave (2017), Poetry and Autobiography (London: Routledge, 2011), and three editions of the Journal of International Women's Studies. Melanie's co-authored book, Feminist Periodcals and the UK Women's Movement: Networks of Feelings Since 1968 is under contract with Edinburgh University Press.

Melanie Waters

Campus Address

Office: Lipman 419



Melanie's research investigates the dynamic relationship between feminism, form and politics in twentieth-century literature and culture. Much of her recent work instrumentalises the latest research on activism and affect, alongside philosophies of time, to shed distinctive new light on a range of feminist writing, including poetry, novels, non-fiction, and drama.

Melanie is especially interested in feminist periodicals and how they have shaped feminist subjects, debates and campaigns from the 1960s onwards. This is the focus of the AHRC-funded project Liberating Histories: Women's Movement Magazines, Media Activism and Periodical Pedagogies and the monograph Feminist Periodicals and the UK Women's Movement: Networks of Feeling Since 1968 (EUP), which she is currently co-authoring with Dr Victoria Bazin and Dr Eleanor Careless.

Her first book, Feminism and Popular Culture: Investigating the Postfeminist Mystique (with Dr Rebecca Munford), examines the peculiar temporality of postfeminist through reference to the complex ways in which popular culture negotiates debates within and about feminism. The changing role of feminism in public-sphere discourses continues to inform Melanie's research, from her articles on the magazines Ms., Spare Rib and Just Seventeen to her most recent publications about the novels of Doris Lessing, Marilyn French and Lisa Alther.

Melanie's research has featured in The Times and USA Today.

She welcomes research proposals on any aspect of feminism, or in any of the areas indicated above.

  • Amy Thorpe Emerging Feminisms: Gender, Female Identity and Visual Culture in the Common Cause, 1909-1920 Start Date: 01/10/2021 End Date: 25/10/2024
  • Megan Sormus Collage Grrrls: Reclaiming Contradictory Femininities in Anti-Chick Lit. Start Date: 20/09/2016 End Date: 31/01/2018
  • Amy Thorpe Emerging Feminisms: Gender, Female Identity and Visual Culture in the Common Cause, 1909-1920 Start Date: 01/10/2021

  • English Literature PhD January 30 2006
  • English Literature MA October 31 2002
  • Fellow (FHEA) Higher Education Academy (HEA) 2015


a sign in front of a crowd
+

Northumbria Open Days

Open Days are a great way for you to get a feel of the University, the city of Newcastle upon Tyne and the course(s) you are interested in.

Research at Northumbria
+

Research at Northumbria

Research is the life blood of a University and at ϲ we pride ourselves on research that makes a difference; research that has application and affects people's lives.

+

Find out what life here is all about. From studying to socialising, term time to downtime, we’ve got it covered.


Latest News and Features

a map showing areas of ice melt in Greenland
S2Cool project lead Dr Muhammad Wakil Shahzad
The Converted Flat in 2049, by the Interaction Research Studio, is one of seven period rooms built as part of the Real Rooms project which opened in July at the Museum of the Home in London.
The UK Centre for Polar Observation and Modelling (CPOM), based at ϲ, has been awarded over £400,000 by the European Space Agency to investigate tipping points in the Earth’s icy regions with a focus on the Antarctic. Photo by Professor Andrew Shepherd.
Nature Awards Inclusive Health Research
Some members of History’s editorial team (from left to right): Daniel Laqua (editor-in-chief), Katarzyna Kosior (reviews editor), Lewis Kimberley (editorial assistant), Charotte Alston (deputy editor) and Henry Miller (online editor).
More news

Back to top