Assistant Professor
Social Media Administrator
http://twitter.com/daniellestern

PhD, Ohio University
MS, Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville
BS, Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville

Office: McMurran 259B
Phone: (757) 594-7131
Email: danielle.stern@cnu.edu

Teaching Responsibilities
Communication Theory, Gender Communication, Introduction to Human Communication, Mass Media and Society

Research Interests
media industries, celebrity, feminism, gender and sexuality, critical-cultural studies

Curriculum Vitae

Stern, D.M., Dunn, J.C., & Manning, J. (Eds.). (Under review). Lucky Strikes and a Three Martini Lunch: Thinking about Television's Mad Men. [Manuscript complete. Book Proposal submitted to Syracuse University Press (Television and Popular Culture Series) August 2010; full manuscript invited from press July 2011.]

Stern, D.M. (revised resubmission under review). It takes a classless, heteronormative, utopian village: Gilmore Girls and the problem of postfeminism. Manuscript under view by The Communication Review.

Stern, D.M. (2011). You had me at Foucault: Living pedagogically in the digital age. Text and Performance Quarterly, 21 (3), 249-266

Stern, D.M., & Willits, M.D.D. (2011). Social media killed the LMS: Re-imagining the traditional learning management system in the age of blogs and social networks. In C. Wankel (Ed.), Educating educators with social media. Bingley, UK: Emerald.

Stern, D.M. (2010). Is sexting bad? In C. Noland, J. Manning, & J. McLennan (Eds.), Case studies of communication about sex. Newcastle, UK: Cambridge.

Stern, D.M. (chapter proposal accepted). Do I like a girl or do I like a boy? Performing bisexuality on A Shot at Love with Tila Tequila. In T. Carilli & J. Campbell (Eds.), A queer gaze: Media and the global LGBT community. Editors in process of interviewing publishers.

Stern, D.M. (2009). Consuming the Fractured Female: Lessons from MTV's The Real World. The Communication Review, 12, 50-77.

Dr. Stern maintains Pop Academy -- a site that brings together cultural criticism inside and outside academia and links to her students' blogs from Critical Theory and Study of Popular Culture (COMM 326).

Communication Studies:  A University Resource

Follow Dr. Stern on Twitter!