Curriculum Vitae

Dana Williams-Johnson

RESEARCH INTERESTS

My research interests include: the impacts of misinformation and hate speech in online spaces, race and feminism in social media, and the societal impact of social media. My goal is to not only examine the impact that racism in online spaces has on society but to also celebrate the joy of marginalized populations and how they utilize social media to share their experiences and beauty online. 

EDUCATION

Howard University, Washington, DC | May 2023
Doctor of Philosophy in Communications, Culture and Media Studies

The George Washington University, Washington, DC | July 2008
Master of Professional Studies in Publishing

Howard University, Washington, DC | May 2000
Bachelor of Arts in Journalism

TEACHING EXPERIENCE

Howard University, Department of Marketing

Assistant Professor | August 2023
Courses taught: Social Media & Internet Marketing, Digital Marketing (graduate), Business Communication, Business Problem Solving, Publication Management, Advanced Digital Marketing

Instructor | August 2018 – May 2023
Courses taught: Social Media & Internet Marketing, Digital Marketing (graduate), Business Communication, Business Problem Solving, Publication Management, Advanced Digital Marketing

Adjunct Professor, Social Media & Internet Marketing | August 2014 – May 2018

DISSERTATION RESEARCH

“Stitches of Progress: Knitting, Consciousness and the Changing Power of Black Women’s Work and Leisure”
Committee: Loren Coleman, Ph.D Advisor, Wei Sun, Ph.D Chair, Dean Gracie Lawson-Borders, Ph.D, Youngjin Park, Ph.D – Proposal defended in May 2022

The purpose of this research is to understand how Black women disrupt the knitting industry’s ideals of beauty and womanhood through their use of social media. Through a content analysis of popular knitting magazines and the social media posts of Black women who knit, in addition to qualitative interviews with Black women who knit, this study will use postcolonial feminist theory to explore societal standards of beauty and womanhood in craft and representations of Black women on social media.

PUBLICATIONS

Williams-Johnson, D. (2023). Double consciousness. In SAGE Business Foundations. SAGE Publications, Ltd., https://doi.org/10.4135/9781071905388

ACCEPTED PUBLICATIONS

Jenkins, K., Williams-Johnson, D. and Sun, W. (2022) “Content Analysis of Selective WHO Affiliated Member Countries’ COVID-19 Vaccination Messages on Twitter Targeting Young Adults” [Submitted for publication] Chapter submitted to “Social Media and Global Youth” Edited by Dr. Emanuel Ngwainmbi, Routledge Publishing. 

WORKS IN PROGRESS

Williams-Johnson, D. and Sun, W. “COVID-19 Infodemic and the Impact of Misinformation on YouTube.” Chapter proposal accepted for “Communicating Pandemics: Focus on Covid-19” Edited by Dr. Emanuel Ngwainmbi, Routledge Publishing 

Williams-Johnson, D. and Powell, A. “How New Racism Masks Hate Speech Online”– abstract submitted for consideration for Special Issue of the journal Multimodality and Society on Race and Multimodality, Edited by Sachi Sekimoto and Christopher Brown

GRADUATE RESEARCH

Graduate Research Assistant June 2021 – September 2021
Berkman-Klein Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University

Performed research for the Social Media Pop-up project on online communities and online harassment. Also wrote for the Berkman-Klein Center’s Medium:

Williams-Johnson, D. (2021, November 17). A Herculean task: How do we save ourselves from social media? Rebooting Social Media. https://medium.com/rebooting-social-media/a-herculean-task-how-do-we-save-ourselves-from-social-media-7bc1378d949b

CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS

Williams-Johnson, D. (2021, March 24-28). “The Impact of Sheltering in Place on Single Black Women During a Pandemic” [Conference presentation]. Eastern Communication Association 2021 Annual Conference, Virtual Conference, United States.

Williams-Johnson, D. (2021, May 27-31). “Black Lives Matter: Fear and Protest” [Conference presentation]. International Communication Association Annual Conference 2021, Virtual Conference.

Williams-Johnson, D. (2021, November 18-22). “How Knitting Became White: Analyzing 75 Years of Vogue Knitting Magazine Covers”. [Conference presentation]. National Communication Association Annual Conference 2021, Seattle, Washington, United States.

Williams-Johnson, D. (2022, April 7-10). “COVID-19 Infodemic and the Impact of Misinformation on YouTube” [Conference presentation]. Eastern Communication Association Annual Conference 2022, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States.

Williams-Johnson, D. (2022, May 26-30). “How New Racism Masks Hate Speech Online” [Conference presentation]. International Communication Association Annual Conference 2022, Paris, France.

SERVICE TO THE UNIVERSITY

  • Partnered with L’Oreal to bring the Brandstorm Competition into the Business Communications course curriculum
  • Participate actively on the Technology and Case Competition Committees

MEMBERSHIPS / AFFILIATIONS

Eastern Communication Association
International Communication Association
National Communication Association

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