Gender, health, and popular culture: historical perspectives / edited by Cheryl Krasnick Warsh.
Material type: TextPublication details: Ontario : Wilfrid Laurier, 2011Description: xvii, 308 p. : illISBN:- 9781554582174 (pbk.)
- 306.461 WAR
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Kozhikode | GIFT | 316.74:61 WAR/G (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | IIMKO-G975 |
Browsing Kozhikode shelves Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
316.422(592.3) FON/P Progress and its (dis-) contents | 316.42(547.1) BAN/P Poor little rich slum | 316.42(592.3) FON/A Almost Uniquely Singapore | 316.74:61 WAR/G Gender, health, and popular culture: | 316.774:681.32 TAP/G Grown up digital | 316.774(73) NIC/I It's the media, stupid | 316 NYD Essentials of sociology |
Includes bibliographical references (p.[259]-295) and index.
Health is a gendered concept in Western cultures, customarily associated with strength in men and beauty in women. Educated or self-styled experts, ranging from physicians to newspaper columnists to advertisers, offer advice on achieving optimal health. Historically, gendered concepts of health were transmitted through visual representations of the ideal female and male bodies, with media images resulting in the absorption of universal standards of beauty and health and generalized desires to achieve them. Topics in this collection are wide ranging and include childbirth advice in Victorian Australia and Cold War America, menstruation films, Canadian abortion tourism, the Pap smear, the Body Worlds exhibition, and fat liberation. Masculinity is explored among drunkards in antebellum Philadelphia and family memoirs during the 1980s AIDS epidemic. Seemingly objective public health advisories are shown to be as influenced by commercial interests, class, gender, and other social differentiations as marketing approaches, and the message presented is mediated to varying degrees by those receiving it. This book will be of interest to scholars in womens studies, health studies, marketing, media studies, social history and anthropology, and popular culture
There are no comments on this title.