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From Suet Pudding to Superhero: Representations of Mens Health for Women
Antonia C. Lyons
University of Birmingham & Coventry University, UKa.c.lyons{at}bham.ac.uk
Sara Willott
University of Birmingham & Coventry University, UK
Mens health has been receiving increasing attention in recent years, both in the media and in academic literature. In February 1998 a British Sunday newspaper, The Mail on Sunday, ran a three-week special feature on A womans guide to mens health. Linguistic representations of health in popular media are revealing of social concerns regarding both the control of health and health care, therefore we critically analysed these texts using post-structuralist, discourse analytic techniques. Mens health was constructed as in crisis and men tended to be aligned with culture (and work) and women with nature (and health). Paradoxically, certain traditional gender dichotomies were both challenged and reinforced within the texts. However, within the five patterns of discourse we identified (mens health in crisis, woman as nature/man as culture, the risk-taking superhero, man as infant and health for productivity), womens current position in society was negatively portrayed and functioned to persuade women that it is in their interests to be responsible for mens health, although without taking overt control. We conclude that the main representations of mens health for women in this series reinforce unequal social relations which does little to benefit women or men.
Key Words: critical psychology discourse analysis masculinity media representations mens health
Health:, Vol. 3, No. 3,
283-302 (1999)
DOI: 10.1177/136345939900300303

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