Staff Profile
Dr Sarah Hill
Lecturer in Media and Cultural Studies
- Email: sarah.hill@ncl.ac.uk
- Personal Website: https://newcastle.academia.edu/Hill
- Address: 3.18 Armstrong Building
Queen Victoria Road
Newcastle University
Newcastle Upon Tyne
NE1 7RU
I am a Lecturer in Media and Cultural Studies and Degree Programme Director for BA (Hons) Media, Communication and Cultural Studies (PQL0). My research interests are broadly situated within feminist media studies, particularly girlhood. I am currently researching disabled girls' online self-representation practices, looking at how disabled girls and young women present themselves online and the ways in which discourses of gender and disability intersect within these practices.
My PhD research (2016) explored how postfeminist discourses of girlhood were mediated within contemporary British girl-centred films. My first monograph, Young Women Girls and Postfeminism in Contemporary British Film, was published in 2020 by Bloomsbury Academic.
Prior to joining Newcastle University, I worked at the University of East Anglia as an AHRC Cultural Engagement Fellow and Senior Research Associate on the Women Amateur Filmmakers in Britain project with the East Anglian Film Archive. My role involved bringing previously unseen work by women amateur filmmakers to audiences by creating a cinema exhibition programme for the newly digitised film collection, which spans the 1920s-1980s. This work aimed to bring previously hidden work by women amateur filmmakers to light and encourage a feminist approach to film archiving and exhibition.
I am keen to supervise students with interests in feminist media studies, girlhood studies, disability, and British cinema.
I am currently researching disabled girls' online self-representation practices, looking at how disabled girls and young women present themselves online and the ways in which discourses of gender and disability intersect within these practices using a combination of textual analysis and ethnographic methods. This work has appeared in the peer-reviewed journals Feminist Media Studies and Girlhood Studies.
My PhD research explored how postfeminist discourses of girlhood were mediated within contemporary British girl-centred films using a combination of textual analysis and critical reception study in order to discern how these films were both informed by and contributed to discourses that circulate around girlhood in the twenty first century (2016). This research informed my first monograph, Young Women, Girls and Postfeminism in Contemporary British Film, which was published by Bloomsbury Academic in 2020.
I am the Module Leader for MCH3002 Youth, Identity and Contemporary Media and also contribute to a number of modules within MCH. I have previously taught at the University of East Anglia and Oxford Brookes University, teaching a broad range of modules in areas such as film studies, media studies, and cultural studies at BA and MA level. I am currently the Degree Programme Director for BA (Hons) Media, Communication and Cultural Studies (September 2020-present)
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Articles
- Hill S. Navigating visibility and risk: disabled young women’s self-presentation practices on social media. Journal of Gender Studies 2023, 33(5), 512-523.
- Hill S. Locating disability within online body positivity discourses: an analysis of #DisabledAndCute. Feminist Media Studies 2023, 23(4), 1311-1326.
- Hill S, Johnston KM. Making women amateur filmmakers visible: reclaiming women’s work through the film archive. Women's History Review 2020, 29(5), 875-889.
- Hill S. Exploring Disabled Girls' Self-representational Practices Online. Girlhood Studies 2017, 10(2), 114-130.
- Hill S. The Ambitious Young Woman and the Contemporary British Sports Film. Assuming Gender 2015, 5(1), 2.
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Authored Book
- Hill S. Young Women, Girls and Postfeminism in Contemporary British Film. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2020.
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Book Chapter
- Hill S. (Not) Being the ‘Cool Disabled Person’: Queering / Cripping Postfeminist Girlhood on Social Media. In: Sikka, T; Longstaff, G; Walls, S, ed. Disrupted Knowledge: Scholarship in a Time of Change. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill, 2023, pp.155-173.