Chauntelle Tibbals

Chauntelle Tibbals
Chauntelle Tibbals headshot.jpg
Born Chauntelle Anne Tibbals
Paramount, California
Website www.chauntelletibbals.com
Academic background
Alma mater University of Texas, Austin
Thesis title [repositories.lib.utexas.edu From reel to virtual: the U.S. adult film industry, production, and changes in women's labor opportunity (1957–2005)]
Thesis year 2010
Doctoral advisor Mounira M. Charrad
Academic work
Main interests Sociologist

Chauntelle Tibbals is a sociologist from the United States. Her scholarly focus includes studies in gender, sexualities, work and organizations, media and new media, popular culture, and qualitative research methods.

Early life

Tibbals was born in Paramount, California, a suburb of Los Angeles, and grew up in and around the LA area.

Education

Tibbals completed her undergraduate studies at UCLA (2000), received her master's degree from CSUN (2003), and obtained her Ph.D. from UT-Austin in Sociology, with a portfolio in Women’s & Gender Studies (2010).[1]

She was a Visiting Scholar in University of Southern California’s Department of Sociology during 2012–13.[2]

Career

Tibbals’ scholarly focus includes sociological studies in gender, sexualities, work and organizations, media and new media, popular culture, and qualitative research methods.[3]

Her research over the past decade centers on the socio-cultural significance of adult content and adult content production, including issues related to law, free speech, and workplace organizational structures. Tibbals writes and speaks frequently about issues related to higher education, law, gender identity and expression, and sexualities.[1]

She was also a contributing writer to Routledge journal Porn Studies, a “peer-reviewed journal to critically explore those cultural products and services designated as pornographic”.[4]

Tibbals is a regular contributor for online media outlet Uproxx.[5]

She is regularly asked to comment on sex, tech, and culture on mainstream media sites, including CNN,[6] NBC News,[7] NPR,[8] ABC-Univision,[9] Vice,[10] Al Jazeera,[11] Bloomberg TV,[12] and Huffington Post.[13]

Bibliography

Thesis
Journal articles
Cited in: Weitzer, Ronald (May 2011). "Pornography's effects: the need for solid evidence: A review essay of "Everyday pornography", edited by Karen Boyle (New York: Routledge, 2010) and "Pornland: how porn has hijacked our sexuality", by Gail Dines (Boston: Beacon, 2010)". Violence Against Women. Sage. 17 (5): 666–675. doi:10.1177/1077801211407478. 
Book chapters

Notes

References

External links

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