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  1. Headscarves and Porno-Chic: Disciplining Girls' Bodies in the European Multicultural Society.Liesbet van Zoonen & Linda Duits - 2006 - European Journal of Women's Studies 13 (2):103-117.
    This article addresses girls' dress, which has become controversial, especially in contemporary multicultural Europe. Using the Dutch public debate about the headscarf, belly shirts, visible G-strings, and other forms of ‘porno-chic’, the authors show that these seemingly separate debates are held together by the regulation of female sexuality. Through their analysis of the headscarves and porno-chic debate, the authors argue that women's sexuality and girls' bodies in particular have become the metonymic location for many a contemporary social dilemma: of the (...)
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  • What is beautiful is bad: Physical attractiveness as stigma.Efrat Tseëlon - 1992 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 22 (3):295–309.
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  • Women and the private domain: A symbolic interactionist perspective.Efrat Tseëlon - 1991 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 21 (1):111–124.
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  • The social organization of sexuality and gender in alternative hard rock: An analysis of intersectionality.Mimi Schippers - 2000 - Gender and Society 14 (6):747-764.
    This article provides an empirical example and an analytic argument for how queer theory can be useful for sociological inquiries of gender relations. Using data collected through participant observation of a rock music subculture, the author addresses the importance of conceptualizing sexuality and gender as analytically distinct. There are five major findings drawn from this analysis. First, members of this subculture queered sexuality despite identifying as heterosexual. Second, there is a dissonance between how members talked about sexuality and how they (...)
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  • Idealised versus tainted femininity: discourses of the menstrual experience in Australian magazines that target young women.Maree Raftos, Debra Jackson & Judy Mannix - 1998 - Nursing Inquiry 5 (3):174-186.
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  • Strange bedfellows: Pornography, affect and feminist reading.Susanna Paasonen - 2007 - Feminist Theory 8 (1):43-57.
    Feminist debates on pornography have relied on articulations of affect, from anti-pornography rhetoric of grief, anger and disgust to anti-anti-pornography claims to enjoyment and pleasure. The complexity of reading, the interpenetration of affect and analysis, experience and interpretation tend to become effaced in arguments both for and against pornography. This article argues for the necessity of moving beyond the affective range of disgust versus pleasure in feminist studies of pornography. Drawing on theorizations of reading and affect, particularly Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick’s (...)
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  • On the semantic status of film: Subjectivity, possible worlds, transcendental semiotics.David Herman - 1994 - Semiotica 99 (1-2):5-28.
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  • The bare truth: Porno-chic models of femininity as a national narrative.Omna Berick-Aharony - 2013 - European Journal of Women's Studies 20 (4):390-407.
    Israel’s affiliation to the west can be observed in various ways. Israel is a full member of many European organizations, and the Council of Europe as well as a participant in European sports leagues, and the Eurovision song contest. However, this affiliation is not ‘natural’, and evolves from Israel’s exclusion from its geographic region due to geopolitical reasons. For Jewish-Israeli society this affiliation is a significant component in its national narrative. This narration is performed through a process of ‘othering’ Israel (...)
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