How to tame your hormones: menopause rage in media discourse

被引:0
|
作者
Orgad, Shani [1 ]
Gilchrist, Kate [2 ]
Rottenberg, Catherine [2 ]
机构
[1] London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Dept Media & Commun, London, England
[2] Goldsmiths Univ London, Dept Media Commun & Cultural Studies, London, England
关键词
Menopause; anger; news; ageing; visibility; POLITICS;
D O I
10.1080/14680777.2024.2409970
中图分类号
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号
05 ; 0503 ;
摘要
While feminist scholarship has challenged earlier misogynist discourses around menopause, menopause continues to be associated with women's rage. Focusing on UK news and advice websites (2018-2024), we ask if and how this association is figured in contemporary cultural representations and what cultural and political work it performs. We situate our examination within three converging contexts: 1) the unleashing of public displays of women's rage in Anglophone media in the wake of the #MeToo movement; 2) the changing cultural terrain of ageing women and their growing influence in public life; and 3) the rising visibility of menopause in the UK. We identify four distinct patterns: 1) construction of rage as a natural and biological symptom of the hormonally imbalanced ageing female body; 2) bundling of rage with other symptoms associated with menopause; 3) repudiation of menopausal women's rage; and 4) positioning of menopausal women as responsible for managing their rage. These patterns render menopausal women's rage visible while simultaneously disavowing and obscuring its legitimacy as an apt response to gender injustice. The analysis shows how menopausal women's apt rage over gender and racial injustice is being depoliticized and reduced to hormone-induced behaviour that ageing women are exhorted to self-manage.
引用
收藏
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] MERGING - HERES HOW TO INFORM THE MEDIA AND YOUR COMMUNITY
    SHERER, JL
    HOSPITALS & HEALTH NETWORKS, 1993, 67 (13): : 46 - 46
  • [22] Frozen discourse: how screenshots hinder depolarization on social media
    Harel, Tal Orian
    INFORMATION COMMUNICATION & SOCIETY, 2025, 28 (02) : 239 - 257
  • [23] MEDIA AND OTHERING : HOW MEDIA DISCOURSE ON MIGRANTS REFLECTS AND AFFECTS SOCIETY'S TOLERANCE
    Kamenova, Denitza
    POLITICKE VEDY, 2014, 17 (02): : 170 - 184
  • [24] How To Make Your Social Media Happier,According To Scientists
    王呈祥
    语数外学习(高中版下旬), 2021, (11) : 95 - 96
  • [25] How to engage in social media to get your work published
    Patel, A.
    Kars, M. S.
    Duggan, L. V.
    Mariano, E. R.
    ANAESTHESIA, 2023, 78 (07) : 906 - 910
  • [26] How Public Service Media Disinformation Shapes Hungarian Public Discourse
    Urban, Agnes
    Polyak, Gabor
    Horvath, Kata
    MEDIA AND COMMUNICATION, 2023, 11 (04): : 62 - 72
  • [27] How #NiUnaMenos Used Discourse and Digital Media to Reach the Masses in Argentina
    Bedrosian, Alyssa
    LATIN AMERICAN RESEARCH REVIEW, 2022, 57 (01) : 100 - 116
  • [28] `Listen to your fear': how fear discourse (re)produces gendered sexual subjectivities
    Beyer, Manuela
    EMOTIONS AND SOCIETY, 2022, 4 (03): : 323 - 340
  • [29] HOW SLOW IS YOUR MESSAGE?: THE EFFECT ON TOURISM COMMUNICATION IN SOCIAL MEDIA
    Herrada-Lores, Sara
    Morales-Munoz, Andrea
    Estrella-Ramon, Antonia
    Iniesta-Bonillo, Ma Angeles
    REVISTA DE ESTUDIOS EMPRESARIALES-SEGUNDA EPOCA, 2024, (02): : 5 - 21
  • [30] How Is Your Bariatric Team Integrating Social Media into Its Program?
    Weaver, Shannon R.
    Viola, Mary Lou
    Crowley, Nina
    Kollar, Linda M.
    Sawhney, Payal
    Henry, Jim
    Reddy, Sheethal D.
    Tanner, Tamara
    Pitman, Kelli
    BARIATRIC SURGICAL PRACTICE AND PATIENT CARE, 2013, 8 (01) : 9 - 11