Dr Kerry McSeveny PhD
Senior Lecturer, Postgraduate Ïã½¶ÊÓÆµ Tutor - Media, Communication and Film
Summary
My research uses a range of qualitative approaches and encompasses a wide variety of topics, but my main research interests include the relationship between food and identity, regulation of the body, the discursive construction of social issues, and identity in interaction. I am Postgraduate Ïã½¶ÊÓÆµ Tutor for Media, Communication and Film, and teach research-focused modules at Levels 5, 6 and 7.
About
My PhD research investigated the management of identity and accountability in women’s online talk about dieting. This work is concerned with discourses around femininity, and offers a feminist reading of how these discourses intersect with those of bodily regulation, self-care, food, health and morality. The project also explored the management of advice-giving, and the functions of humour in interaction. Since then my research has continued to explore issues relating to both subjective and societal aspects of food and eating, and includes an examination of the discourse of commercial weight loss magazines, analysis of UK mainstream media representations of entomophagy (eating insects), and an investigation of the experience of eating in hospital. Another strand of research relates broadly to the use of social media and related technology in a range of contexts, including the use of social media in emergency crisis communication and the policing of protest events, an examination of communicative practices during an city music festival, and an exploration of the potential of virtual worlds for social interaction and physical rehabilitation in older people.
Senior Lecturer
Teaching
Department of Media Arts and Communication
College of Social Sciences and Arts
Journalism and Public Relations
MA Public Relations
BA Journalism, Public Relations & Media
BA Sports Journalism
Ïã½¶ÊÓÆµing Communications (PG)
Ïã½¶ÊÓÆµ Skills (UG)
Dissertation (UG and PG)
Ïã½¶ÊÓÆµ
- Culture and Creativity Ïã½¶ÊÓÆµ Institute
Food in Sheffield Hospitals
Publications
Journal articles
Bowen, S., Mcseveny, K., Lockley, E., Wolstenholme, D., Cobb, M., & Dearden, A. (2013). . CoDesign, 9 (4), 230-246.
Mcseveny, K., Heller, B., Light, A., & Machaczek, K. (2013). . Journal of Gaming & Virtual Worlds, 5 (3), 235-249.
Soltani, H., Furness, P., Mcseveny, K., Arden, M., Garland, C., Sustar, H., & Dearden, A. (2012). . Journal of Obesity.
Furness, P.J., McSeveny, K., Arden, M., Garland, C., Dearden, A., & Soltani, H. (2011). . BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth, 11 (69).
McSeveny, K. (2011). Book review: Helen Malson and Maree Burns (eds): Critical Feminist Approaches to Eating Dis/orders. Hove, Sussex and New York: Routledge, 2009. 257 pp. £15.95, ISBN 0415418100 (pbk); $80.00, ISBN 0415418119 (hbk). Feminism & Psychology, 21 (2), 279-284.
Conference papers
Mcseveny, K., Grainger, K., & Doherty, K. (2010). . In Fifth International Symposium on Politeness, University of Basel, 30 June 2010 - 2 July 2010.
Mcseveny, K., Doherty, K., & Grainger, K. (2009). . In Laughter and Humour in Interaction Conference, University of Huddersfield, 24 June 2009 - 25 June 2009.
Mcseveny, K., Doherty, K., & Grainger, K. (2009). . In 1st Autumn Conference of Interpersonal Communication and Social Interaction Section of ECREA, Tampere, Finland, 21 October 2009 - 23 October 2009.
Mcseveny, K., & Doherty, K. (2016). "Confident, sexy and in control": Practices of self-transformation and representations of 'authentic femininity' in Slimming World magazine. In International Association of Media and Communication Ïã½¶ÊÓÆµers, University of Leicester, 27 July 2016 - 2016.
Mcseveny, K., & Doherty, K. (2005). Dieting discourses: the online interactions of women in a commercial weight loss group. In International Society of Critical Health Psychology Conference, Sheffield, 1 April 2005.
Grainger, K., Doherty, K., & Mcseveny, K. (2006). "Stop Cheating": impoliteness on a weight watchers message board. In 2nd International Symposium on Politeness, Huddersfield University, 1 July 2006.
Book chapters
Mcseveny, K., & Waddington, D. (2017). . In Akhgar, B., Waddington, D., & Staniforth, A. (Eds.) Application of social media in crisis management : advanced science and technologies for security applications. Springer:
Lyle, A., Day, T., & Mcseveny, K. (2017). . In Akhgar, B., Staniforth, A., & Waddington, D. (Eds.) Application of social media in crisis management. (pp. 205-224). Cham: Springer International:
Waddington, D., & Mcseveny, K. (2012). . In Bennett, S. (Ed.) Innovative thinking in risk, crisis, and disaster management. (pp. 41-58). Farnham, Surrey: Gower Publishing
McSeveny, K., & Waddington, D. (2011). Up Close and Personal – The Interplay between Information Technology and Human Agency in the Policing of the 2011 Sheffield Anti-Lib Dem Protest. In Advanced Information and Knowledge Processing. (pp. 199-212). Springer London:
Mcseveny, K., & Waddington, D. (2011). . In Akhgar, B., & Yates, S. (Eds.) Intelligence management : knowledge driven frameworks for combating terrorism and organized crime. (pp. 199-212). Springer:
Reports
Booth, A., Garrison, L., Riches, T., Dearden, A., Glover, I., Hill, K., ... Westaway, S. (2015). . London: Digital R&D Fund for the Arts.
Theses / Dissertations
Murphy, K.D. (2021). . (Doctoral thesis). Supervised by Deller, R., & Mcseveny, K.
Presentations
Mcseveny, K., Yoxall, A., & Doherty, K. (2023). What is ‘good food’ for patient wellbeing? Contradictory discourses in talk about hospital food, health and rehabilitation. Presented at: Food and Communication Conference, University of Orebro, Sweden
Postgraduate supervision
Current supervision
Catriona McAvoy - Below the Line: Decentering Narratives from the Stanley Kubrick Archive
Anna Richards - A critical and cultural history of Sheffield DocFest, 1994-2019
Claire Trelfa - Dress and identity in the care home: An institution and carer perspective
Previous supervision:
Nittaya Boonchum - Self-management of diabetes in an online community in Thailand
Kathryn Murphy - Joe Sugg: Authenticity, Self-branding and Networking from YouTube Microcelebrity to Mainstream Star