I got drunk and lost my virginity : young women's magazines and the management of sexual identity


Autoria(s): Tait, Gordon
Data(s)

1996

Resumo

It has often been argued that young woman’s magazine’s, like Cosmopolitan, Cleo Dolly and Seventeen, constitute a significant instrument in the patriarchal repression of young women - their hegemonic success lying in the fact that they appear to be sites wherein young women are ‘free’ from the elements of coercion so obviously in evidence within other terrains, such as the school and the family. This paper will suggest an alternative approach to these magazines. Rather than locating such texts within an overall model of repression and patriarchal domination, it will be argued here that they can be regarded as practical manuals which enrol young women to do specific kinds of work on themselves. In doing so, they form an effective link between the governmental imperatives aimed at constructing particular personas (such as, for example, ‘the sexually responsible young woman’), and the actual practices whereby these imperatives are operationalised. These manuals do not prevent young women from learning to ‘project a unique self’, they constitute a significant source of practices and techniques through which particular types of self are shaped.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/28937/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/28937/1/c28937.pdf

Tait, Gordon (1996) I got drunk and lost my virginity : young women's magazines and the management of sexual identity. In Regulating Identities Conference, 3-4 October 1996, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane. (Unpublished)

Direitos

Copyright 1996 [please consult the author]

Fonte

Office of Education Research; Faculty of Education; School of Cultural & Language Studies in Education

Palavras-Chave #200205 Culture Gender Sexuality #Gender #Women's magazines #Identity #Sex
Tipo

Conference Paper