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Changing cultures: feminism, youth and consumerism

London: Sage Publications (1992)

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  1. Gender in the making of commercial worlds: Creativity, vitalism and the practices of marketing.Anne M. Cronin - 2008 - Feminist Theory 9 (3):293-312.
    If capitalism is being increasingly understood as performative and processual, and if these understandings are being folded into capitalism's production of itself, what place does gender have in performing the commercial world? This article argues that the significance of gender as genre or type has been overlooked in the recent literature on the performance of the market or market relations. While the role of economic theories and management practices in making markets has been examined, and the place of women in (...)
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  • Sexual Abuse and Troubled Feminism: A Reply to Camille Guy.Chris Atmore - 1999 - Feminist Review 61 (1):83-96.
    In a recent issue of Feminist Review Camille Guy argued, focusing on selected controversies in New Zealand and Australia, that radical feminists have had a prescriptive hegemony in defining issues of sexual abuse, and that this has resulted in injustices and a censorious climate in which people who disagreed were too intimidated to speak out. This article replies to Guy's assertions and, while disagreeing with much of her argument, also suggests that it does point to more broadly sig-nificant issues for (...)
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  • Bridging the Gap: Feminism, Fashion and Consumption.Angela McRobbie - 1997 - Feminist Review 55 (1):73-89.
    The article confronts two issues, first the question of women and consumption and second the fashion industry as a feminized sector. In the first instance the argument is that recent scholarship on consumption has been weakened by an inattention to questions of exclusion from consumption and the production of consumption. Income differentials as well as questions of poverty have dropped off the agenda in this debate. Attention instead has been paid to the meaning systems which come into play around items (...)
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  • Theorizing the Young Woman in the Body.Liz Frost - 2005 - Body and Society 11 (1):63-85.
    In this article the author seeks to establish a theoretical framework within which the contemporary concerns about young women’s unhappy and unhealthy relationships with their bodies can be elucidated. Symbolic interactionist theories are considered to explicate the imperative of producing visual identity, and modern interactionist work (Giddens) to consider the consumer capitalist context of this imperative. Post-structural feminist work is interrogated for its robust engagement with the contradictory approaches to the possibility of female agency in relation to ‘doing looks’. The (...)
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  • Troubled Teens: Managing Disorders of Transition and Consumption.Christine Griffin - 1997 - Feminist Review 55 (1):4-21.
    This article focuses on the representation of youth as a key moment of transition in contemporary western societies, set between the dependent state of childhood and the supposed maturity and independence of adult status. Young people are viewed as gendered, racialized and sexualized beings who also occupy specific class locations, and are assumed to move through crucial points of transition as they leave full-time education and enter the job market, as well as the (hetero)sexual and marriage marketplaces. The article examines (...)
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  • Reproductive consumption.Ruth Fletcher - 2006 - Feminist Theory 7 (1):27-47.
    Significant developments in medical research and technology have meant that the process of reproduction is increasingly affected by the consumption of a variety of services and goods. Individuals intervene in their own reproductive processes as they eat particular foods, take particular drugs and avail themselves of diagnostic and reproductive services. Although such developments have been analysed by feminists in terms of their ethical consequences or their contribution to the commodification of reproduction, they have not been evaluated in terms of their (...)
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