Micky Lee, Associate Professor

Micky Lee, PhD

Associate Professor
Department of Communication and Journalism

 

 

 

Phone: 617.994.6453
Fax: 617.742.6982
Email: mlee@suffolk.edu
Office: Ridgeway Building, Rm. 308
Website

 

Education

  • PhD, University of Oregon
  • MPhil, City University of Hong Kong
  • BSSC, Hong Kong Baptist University

Office Hours Fall 2012

(M)(W) 11:00 a.m.-12:45 p.m./2:30-3:45 p.m./(Th) 4:00-5:15 p.m. / by appointment

 

Research Interests

My research focus intersects the following three areas:

  • International communication
  • Telecommunications, information, new information and communication technologies
  • Feminist political economy

Some research questions that I am currently interested in:

  • The intersection between finance, information, and media.
  • How to understand gendered and racialized images from a feminist political economic perspective

Biography

Micky Lee is a feminist, a Hong Kong citizen, a British national, and a US resident.

 

Employment History

Suffolk University, 2005 to present
Ithaca College, 2004-2005

 

Selected Publications

Book

Lee, M. (2010).  Free Information? The Case Against Google. Champaign, IL: Common Ground.

 

Refereed Journal Articles

Lee, M. (forthcoming). Information and finance capital. Information, Communication, and Society.

 

Lee, M. (2014). A feminist political economic critique of women and investment in the popular media. Feminist Media Studies, 14(4).

 

Lee, M., & Smith, C. (2012). The bodies of Chinese women gymnasts in the Beijing Olympics. China Media Research, 8(3), 72-80.

 

Lee, M. (2012). Time and the political economy of financial television. Journal of Communication Inquiry, 36(4), 322-339.

 

Lee, M. (2011). A feminist political economic critique of the human development approach to new ICTs. International Communication Gazette, 73(6), 524-538.

 

Lee, M.  (2011). Google ads and the Blindspot Debate.  Media, Culture, Society, 33(3), 433-447.

 

Lee, M.  (2010).  A political economic critique of Google Maps and Google Earth. Information, Communication, and Society, 13(6), 909-928.

 

Lee, M.  (2010).  Revisiting the “Google in China” question from a political economic perspective.  China Media Research, 6(2), 15-24.

 

Translated into Lee, M. (2010). 从政治经济学视角再次探讨“谷歌在中国问题. China Media Report Overseas, 6(1), 44-53.

 

Lee, M.  (2010).  How to think about intellectual property of open source software from a feminist political economic perspective?  The International Journal of Technology, Knowledge, and Society, 6(1), 107-119.

 

Lee, M. (2009).  Constructed global space, constructed citizenship.  Javnost – The Public, 16(3), 21-38.

 

Fung, A., & Lee, M. (2009) Localizing a global amusement park: Hong Kong’s Disneyland.  Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies 23(2), 195-206.

 

Lee, M.  (2008).  A feminist political economic understanding of the relations between state, market and civil society from Beijing to Tunis.  International Journal of Media and Cultural Politics, 4(2), 221-240.

 

Lee, M.  (2007).  On the relationship between international telecommunications development and global women's poverty.  International Communication Gazette, 69(2), 193-213.

 

Lee, M.   (2006).  What's missing in feminist research in new information and communication technologies?  Feminist Media Studies, 6(2), 191-210.

 

Lee, M.  (2004).  UNESCO's conceptualization of women and telecommunications 1970-2000.  Gazette: The International Journal for Communication Studies, 66(6), 533-552.

 

Essay

Lee, M. (2012). Mediating women workers in fair trade and sweatfree production. Feminist Media Studies, 12(2), 307-310.

 

Lee, M.  (2011). A feminist political economy to communication.  Feminist Media Studies Tenth Anniversary edition, 11(1), 83-87.

 

Courses Taught

Undergraduate

Archer fellow challenge seminar: Reading popular culture
Business of Media
Communication theory
Freshmen seminar: Women, gender and the media
Globalization of telecommunications and media
Introduction to mass communication / Introduction to media
Media and popular culture II (1970s to present)
Media criticism
Media effects and uses
Media history
Media seminar: Adaptation and parody
Media writing
New Hong Kong cinema 

 

Graduate

Communication research methods
Gender communication
Issues in communication: Feminist theories and communication
Issues in communication: The information society
Special Topic: Women, Gender, and new information and communication technologies