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She is a professor of communications at Goldsmiths College, University of London, where she continues to teach and supervise doctoral students as well as support various curricular initiatives.
McRobbie’s academic research spans five decades. Influenced by the work of Professor Stuart Hall at Birmingham, McRobbie has authored many books and scholarly articles on young women[3] and popular culture, gender and sexuality,[4] the British fashion industry, social and cultural theory, the changing world of work and the new creative economy, feminism and the rise of neoliberalism.[5]
McRobbie’s most famous works stretch from her mid 1970s study of Jackie(magazine) to The Aftermath of Feminism (2008, German edition published in 2010). This book draws on Foucault to decipher the various technologies of gender which are directed towards young woman as "subjects of capacity".[6] This book was followed by Feminism and the Politics of Resilience in 2020 which extends the analysis of feminism and neoliberalism to include the impact of welfare reductions and poverty shaming.[7] In 2024 she published two books, one on the German artist Ulrike Ottinger and the other titled Feminism, Young Women and Cultural Studies: the Birmingham Essays from 1975 Onwards.
McRobbie's early academic output emerged from her time at CCCS, where she analyzed youth subcultures and the politics of feminist research.[11] Her essay "Girls and Subcultures," co-authored with Jenny Garber [12] and published in Resistance Through Rituals (1975), remains a seminal contribution to cultural studies.[13] From 1981, she held academic posts at institutions including the Polytechnic of East London, St Martins School of Art, and Thames Valley University.[14] In 1996, she was appointed Reader at Loughborough University, where she completed her PhD in 1998. That same year she joined Goldsmiths, University of London, as Professor of Communications.[10]
In 2018, McRobbie was elected Fellow of the British Academy.[15] She has also held visiting professorships globally and has delivered keynote lectures at numerous international institutions.[2]
McRobbie’s research is organized across five interrelated pathways that collectively reflect her sustained interest in feminist sociology and contemporary cultural studies.[5]
This included her semiological reading of Jackie magazine and work on youth subcultures from a feminist perspective.[17] She developed key critiques of male-centered subcultural theory and advanced feminist readings of popular culture.[18] These early studies were widely distributed, translated, and adopted by institutions such as the Open University. Her essays from this period were reissued by Goldsmiths Press in 2024 in a volume titled Feminism, Young Women and Cultural Studies: The Birmingham Essays from 1975 Onwards.[19]
Her second research trajectory dealt with the rise of the creative industries and the transformation of cultural labor, with a particular emphasis on fashion and design.[20]
From the 1990s onward, she analyzed the emergence of cultural entrepreneurship and its intersection with neoliberal economic structures.[21] Works such as British Fashion Design (1998)[22] and Be Creative (2016) examine how creative labor is valorized and exploited under post-Fordist conditions.[23] Her co-authored book in 2022 and recent articles in 2025 further this inquiry, turning attention to fashion policy and labor conditions in women’s media industries.[24]
Her second research trajectory dealt with the rise of the creative industries and the transformation of cultural labor, with a particular emphasis on fashion and design.[20]
From the 1990s onward, she analyzed the emergence of cultural entrepreneurship and its intersection with neoliberal economic structures.[21] Works such as British Fashion Design (1998)[22] and Be Creative (2016) examine how creative labor is valorized and exploited under post-Fordist conditions.[23] Her co-authored book in 2022 and recent articles in 2025 further this inquiry, turning attention to fashion policy and labor conditions in women’s media industries.[24]
A third stream of McRobbie’s scholarship is grounded in feminist theory, influenced by thinkers such as Judith Butler and Stuart Hall.[25] Her writing interrogates concepts such as post-feminist masquerade, neoliberal feminism, and the psychic life of power.[26] Books like The Aftermath of Feminism (2008)[6][27] and Feminism and the Politics of Resilience (2020) are central to this line of thought.[28] Currently, she is working on a third volume, Feminism, Culture and Society: InTimes of the Great Moving Right Show, with recent excerpts appearing in the European Journal of Cultural Studies.[29]
Her fourth thematic focus lies in her sustained engagement with feminist, queer, and post-colonial visual culture.[30] McRobbie has written critically on artists and filmmakers such as Ulrike Ottinger,[31]Chantal Akerman,[32]Yinka Shonibare, and Tatjana Turanskyj. These writings investigate aesthetic strategies and cultural politics across global contexts, as seen in her 2024 monograph on Ottinger and ongoing essays on Isaac Julien and Chila Burman.[19]
The fifth dimension of McRobbie’s scholarship includes her role as a public intellectual. From the mid-1970s, she contributed essays, reviews, and commentary on contemporary culture and politics.[33] She has written on themes ranging from youth culture and pop music to urban precarity and cultural policy.[34]
McRobbie lives in London and Berlin and continues to teach and conduct research at Goldsmiths, University of London.[4] Her interdisciplinary work reflects a lifelong commitment to feminist scholarship and public engagement.[2]
McRobbie, Angela (1978). 'Jackie': an ideology of adolescent femininity. Birmingham: Birmingham: Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies (CCCS Stencilled Papers), University of Birmingham. ISBN9780704405004.
McRobbie, Angela (1991). Feminism and youth culture: from 'Jackie' to 'Just seventeen'. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan. ISBN9780333452639.
McRobbie, Angela (1994). Postmodernism and popular culture. London New York: Routledge. ISBN9780415077132. Also available in Turkish, Chinese and Korean. Individual chapters are also available in other languages.
McRobbie, Angela (1999). In the culture society: art, fashion and popular music. London New York: Routledge. ISBN9780415137508.
McRobbie, Angela (2000) [1991]. Feminism and youth culture (2nd ed.). Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan Press. ISBN9780333770320. Also available in Chinese.
McRobbie, Angela (2005). The uses of cultural studies a textbook. London Thousand Oaks, California: SAGE. ISBN9781412908450. Also available in other languages including Czech and Chinese.
McRobbie, Angela (2009). The aftermath of feminism: gender, culture and social change. Los Angeles London: SAGE. ISBN9780761970620. Translated into German as Top girls : Feminismus und der Aufstieg des neoliberalen Geschlechterregimes. Wiesbaden: VS-Verl. 2010. ISBN9783531162720.
McRobbie, Angela (2014). Be creative making a living in the new culture industries. Cambridge, UK, Malden, MA: Polity Press. ISBN9780745661940.
McRobbie, Angela (2015). Feminism, femininity and the perfect. Sage.
McRobbie, Angela (2016). Stuart Hall, cultural studies and the rise of Black and Asian British art. About the sociologist Stuart Hall.
McRobbie, Angela; Garber, Jenny (2000) [1978], "Girls and subcultures", in McRobbie, Angela (ed.), Feminism and youth culture (2nd ed.), Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan Press, pp. 12–25, ISBN9780333770320 Originally appeared as: McRobbie, Angela; Garber, Jenny (2006) [1975]. "Girls and subcultures". In Hall, Stuart; Jefferson, Tony (eds.). Resistance through rituals: youth subcultures in post-war Britain (2nd ed.). New York, US Oxford, UK: Routledge. pp. 172–184. OCLC489757261. ISBN9781134346530.
McRobbie, Angela (2000) [1991]. "Settling accounts with subcultures: a feminist critique". In McRobbie, Angela (ed.). Feminism and youth culture (2nd ed.). Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan Press. pp. 26–43. ISBN9780333770320.
McRobbie, Angela (2000) [1991]. "The culture of working-class girls". In McRobbie, Angela (ed.). Feminism and youth culture (2nd ed.). Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan Press. pp. 44–66. ISBN978-0-333770320.
McRobbie, Angela (2000) [1991]. "Jackie magazine: romantic individualism and the teenage girl". In McRobbie, Angela (ed.). Feminism and youth culture (2nd ed.). Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan Press. pp. 67–117. ISBN9780333770320.
McRobbie, Angela (2000) [1991]. "The politics of feminist research: between talk, text and action". In McRobbie, Angela (ed.). Feminism and youth culture (2nd ed.). Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan. pp. 118–136. ISBN9780333770320.
McRobbie, Angela; Firth, Simon (2000) [1978]. "Rock and sexuality". In McRobbie, Angela (ed.). Feminism and youth culture (2nd ed.). Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan Press. pp. 137–158. ISBN978-0-333770320.
McRobbie, Angela (2000) [1991]. "Teenage mothers: a new social state?". In McRobbie, Angela (ed.). Feminism and youth culture (2nd ed.). Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan Press. pp. 159–179. ISBN978-0-333770320.
McRobbie, Angela; Thornton, Sarah L. (2000) [1991]. "Rethinking 'moral panic' for multi-mediated social worlds". In McRobbie, Angela (ed.). Feminism and youth culture (2nd ed.). Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan Press. pp. 180–197. ISBN978-0-333770320.
McRobbie, Angela (2000) [1991]. "Sweet smell of success? New ways of being young women". In McRobbie, Angela (ed.). Feminism and youth culture (2nd ed.). Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan Press. pp. 198–214. ISBN978-0-333770320.
McRobbie, Angela (2013). "Angela McRobbie interviews herself: How did it happen, how did I get there?". Cultural Studies. 27 (5). Taylor and Francis: 828–832. doi:10.1080/09502386.2013.773677. S2CID161169575.