Media Visibility of Femininity and Care: UK Women's Magazines' Representations of Female "Keyworkers" During COVID-19

被引:0
|
作者
Orgad, Shani [1 ]
Rottenberg, Catherine [2 ]
机构
[1] London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, London, England
[2] Univ Nottingham, Nottingham, England
来源
关键词
women's magazines; COVID-19; women keyworkers; femininity; care gratitude; care justice;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号
05 ; 0503 ;
摘要
This article explores the media visibility of female keyworkers-workers deemed essential for society's functioning, including medical staff, transport workers, and social care workers-during COVID-19. Focusing on UK women's magazines as an important genre regulating femininity, we analyze representations of female keyworkers during the pandemic's first six months, demonstrating how these depictions and the construction of keyworkers' femininity gesture toward "care justice" while simultaneously buttressing sentimentalized "care gratitude." "Care justice" is articulated through a focus on women's ordinariness, collectivity, and the voicing of critique regarding working conditions and the urgent need to invest in care infrastructure. "Care gratitude" is promoted through the magazines' celebration of "heroic" keyworkers who are overwhelmingly young, able, employed, resilient, and caring, reinforcing heteronormative femininity. Women's magazines thus constitute a mediated site where both the possibilities and the limitations of the recent media visibility of care work and those performing it are illuminated.
引用
收藏
页码:2843 / 2863
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Digital Media Effect on Diabetic Eye Care During COVID-19 pandemic
    Tarib, Imane
    Parekh, Bela
    Tabor, Victoria
    Patel, Dhruv
    Deb, Anik
    Patel, Payal P.
    Parekh, Swati J.
    Parekh, Jai G.
    INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE, 2022, 63 (07)
  • [42] Media presentation of hospital discharge to care homes during the COVID-19 pandemic
    Abe, Eniola
    Dawson, Pamela
    Scott, Jason
    JOURNAL OF INTEGRATED CARE, 2023, 31 (04) : 300 - 314
  • [43] Social representations of media reception during the COVID-19 lockdown in Colombia: from messages to meanings
    Garces-Prettel, Miguel
    Navarro-Diaz, Luis Ricardo
    Jaramillo-Echeverri, Luis Guillermo
    Santoya-Montes, Yanin
    CADERNOS DE SAUDE PUBLICA, 2021, 37 (02):
  • [44] Media representations of social housing before and during COVID-19: the changing face of the socially excluded
    Kuskoff, Ella
    Buchanan, Chris
    Ablaza, Christine
    Parsell, Cameron
    Perales, Francisco
    HOUSING STUDIES, 2022, 38 (01) : 22 - 43
  • [45] Perceptions of women senior leaders in the UK Higher Education during the COVID-19 pandemic
    Wilkinson, Jennifer
    Male, Trevor
    EDUCATIONAL MANAGEMENT ADMINISTRATION & LEADERSHIP, 2025, 53 (01) : 123 - 140
  • [46] "Anxious and traumatised ": Users' experiences of maternity care in the UK during the COVID-19 pandemic
    Sanders, Julia
    Blaylock, Rebecca
    MIDWIFERY, 2021, 102
  • [47] Critical care work during COVID-19: a qualitative study of staff experiences in the UK
    Montgomery, Catherine M.
    Humphreys, Sally
    McCulloch, Corrienne
    Docherty, Annemarie B.
    Sturdy, Steve
    Pattison, Natalie
    BMJ OPEN, 2021, 11 (05):
  • [48] Cash, crisis, and capers: The UK's cashbox policy during COVID-19
    Dong, Yunhe
    Luo, Haoyi
    Xu, Zijin
    Yang, Xing
    ECONOMICS LETTERS, 2024, 240
  • [49] Receiving maternity care during the COVID-19 pandemic: Experiences of women's partners and support persons
    Vasilevski, Vidanka
    Sweet, Linda
    Bradfield, Zoe
    Wilson, Alyce N.
    Hauck, Yvonne
    Kuliukas, Lesley
    Homer, Caroline S. E.
    Szabo, Rebecca A.
    Wynter, Karen
    WOMEN AND BIRTH, 2022, 35 (03) : 298 - 306
  • [50] Women's views and experiences of maternity care during COVID-19 in Ireland: A qualitative descriptive study
    Panda, Sunita
    O'Malley, Deirdre
    Barry, Paula
    Vallejo, Nora
    Smith, Valerie
    MIDWIFERY, 2021, 103