Sarah Riley is Professor in Critical Health Psychology at Massey University, New Zealand, and the director of its Health Psychology master's programme. Her research examines discourse, affect and materiality in relation to digital technology, subjectivity, gender, bodies and neoliberalism.
Adrienne Evans is Reader for Media in the Centre for Postdigital Cultures at Coventry University, UK. Her research focuses on accounts of intimacy in the context of a postfeminist sensibility. In her work, she explores ways in which gender organises personal, social, intimate and cultural relationships as well as their manifestations in media culture.
Martine Robson is a lecturer in Psychology at Aberystwyth University. Her work focuses on how people negotiate individualistic health-related lifestyle advice and uses poststructuralist theory to examine the ways in which people adopt and resist neoliberal healthism.
Also published by the authors Postfeminism and Health: Critical P