LSE creators

Number of items: 25.
Media and Communications
  • O'Neill, Rachel (1 July 2025) Why Instagram doctors can't fix the problems associated with wellness influencing. Impact of Social Sciences Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2025). Rethinking the ‘wellness influencer’: medical doctors, lifestyle expertise and the question of credentials. International Journal of Cultural Studies, 28(3), 685-701. https://doi.org/10.1177/13678779241307032 picture_as_pdf
  • Dosekun, Simidele, O'Neill, Rachel (2024). Popular financial feminisms: mapping new mergers of feminism and capitalism. Signs, picture_as_pdf
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2024). Disengage, dismantle, design: three strategies for building feminist media infrastructures. Feminist Theory, 25(3). https://doi.org/10.1177/14647001241228856 picture_as_pdf
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2024). By, for, with women? On the politics and potentialities of wellness entrepreneurship. Sociological Review, 72(1), 3 - 20. https://doi.org/10.1177/00380261221142461 picture_as_pdf
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2022). Notes on not knowing: male ignorance after #MeToo. Feminist Theory, 23(4), 490 - 511. https://doi.org/10.1177/14647001211014756 picture_as_pdf
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2020). Pursuing “wellness”: considerations for media studies. Television & New Media, 21(6), 628 - 634. https://doi.org/10.1177/1527476420919703 picture_as_pdf
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2020). Glow from the inside out Deliciously Ella and the politics of ‘healthy eating’. European Journal of Cultural Studies, https://doi.org/10.1177/1367549420921868 picture_as_pdf
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2 December 2019) Author interview: Q&A with Rachel O’Neill on Seduction: men, masculinity and mediated intimacy. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2019). Harassed: gender, bodies and ethnographic research, by Rebecca Hanson and Patricia Richards. Times Higher Education,
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2019). Seduction, Inc: the pickup industry mates market logic with the arts of seduction – turning human intimacy into hard labour. Aeon,
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2018). Masculinising spaces: inside the seduction industry. The Quietus,
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2018). Seduction: men, masculinity and mediated intimacy. Polity Press.
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2018). Book review: power, knowledge and feminist scholarship: an ethnography of academia. Feminist Theory, https://doi.org/10.1177/1464700118766968
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2018). Book Review: Not All Dead White Men Classics and Misogyny in the Digital Age, by D. Zuckerberg. Times Higher Education Supplement,
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2017). Homosociality and heterosex: patterns of intimacy and relationality among men in the London ‘seduction community’. In Cornwall, Andrea, Karioris, Frank G., Lindisfarne, Nancy (Eds.), Masculinities under neoliberalism (pp. 261 - 276). Zed Books. https://doi.org/10.5040/9781350221307.ch-017
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2017). Console-ing passions.
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2017). The aesthetics of sexual discontent notes from the London ‘seduction community’. In Elias, Ana Sofia, Gill, Rosalind, Scharff, Christina (Eds.), Aesthetic Labour: Rethinking Beauty Politics in Neoliberalism (pp. 333 - 349). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-47765-1_19
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2016). Reply to Borkowska. Men and Masculinities, 19(5), 550-554. https://doi.org/10.1177/1097184X16664953
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2016). Feminist encounters with evolutionary psychology: introduction. Australian Feminist Studies, 30(86), 345-350. https://doi.org/10.1080/08164649.2016.1157909
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2015). The work of seduction: intimacy and subjectivity in the London ‘seduction community’. Sociological Research Online, 20(4), 1-4. https://doi.org/10.5153/sro.3744
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2015). Whither critical masculinity studies? Notes on inclusive masculinity theory, postfeminism and sexual politics. Men and Masculinities, 18(1), 100-120. https://doi.org/10.1177/1097184X14553056
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2014). Book review: performing sex: the making and unmaking of women's erotic lives by Breanne Fahs. Feminism & Psychology, 24(4), 552-556. https://doi.org/10.1177/0959353514533864
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2014). As if gender mattered: reconsidering the implications of ‘intoxicating stories’. International Journal of Drug Policy, 25(3), 356-357. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.drugpo.2014.04.005
  • O'Neill, Rachel (2013). Impressions of my mother: on willfulness and passionate scholarship. In Reimer, Vanessa, Sahagian, Sarah (Eds.), Mother of Invention: How Our Mothers Influenced Us As Feminist Academics and Activists . Demeter Press.