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Distributed for University of British Columbia Press

From Red Dresses to Memory Stones

Multimedia Activism and Gender-Based Violence in Canada

Sexual assault, intimate partner violence, femicide, and violence against 2SLGBTQIA+ people: gender-based violence, or GBV, has many forms and many victims. The #MeToo movement highlighted the power of speaking up on a global scale, and From Red Dresses to Memory Stones is a necessary investigation of GBV activism in Canada.

Nicolette Little interviews numerous activists and explores five anti-violence media projects in detail: the REDress Project and Disposable Red Woman installations, which draw attention to Canada’s crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls; the digital memorialization of murdered Ontario women each anniversary of the “Montreal Massacre”; the documentary Slut or Nut, filmed during the lead-up to a rape trial; and the Memory Stones Project, in which beach stones are painted with anti-violence messages, then posted across social media. Little challenges assumptions about GBV and provides insights into citizens’ creative, daring, collaborative, and memorializing ways of addressing it – and the discourses that normalize rape culture.

Ultimately, this engaging work is about hope, demonstrating that anti-violence activism is a matter of will and can be done in ways that prioritize consent and protect activists’ well-being.


240 pages | 25 photos, 1 table | 6 x 9 | © 2026

Media Studies

Sociology: Social Change, Social Movements, Political Sociology

Women's Studies:


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