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  4. The knowing mother: Maternal knowledge and the reinforcement of the feminine consuming subject in magazine advertisements
 
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The knowing mother: Maternal knowledge and the reinforcement of the feminine consuming subject in magazine advertisements

Journal
Journal of Consumer Culture
Type
journal article
Date Issued
2019-12-02
Author(s)
Davis, Teresa
Hogg, Margaret
Marshall, David
Schneider, Tanja  
Petersen, Alan
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/1469540519889990
Abstract
The caring mother is one of the most recurring images of femininity in post-war advertising. We examine how mothers are depicted as knowing consumers in advertisements in Australian Women’s Weekly and the United Kingdom’s Good Housekeeping magazines between 1950 and 2010. Our data suggest that although visual representations of maternal consumer knowledge change over this period, assumptions about the responsibilities of mothers endure in the family-related advertisements in these women’s magazines. There is a shift over time, however, from a representation of mothers as passive recipients of advice provided by external experts to a more active representation of mothers as experts themselves within both domestic and private spheres. We trace historically how the trope of the knowing mother works as a visual discursive device that helps to reinforce not just patriarchal hegemony, but a particular form of maternal hegemony. The hegemony of motherhood presents a particularly desirable/idealised femininity. However, this visual depiction also serves to gender the very way in which maternal knowledge is to be used. While maternal knowledge is depicted as changing from being merely intuitive or practical to subsuming the technique of knowledge or prescribed expertise; the purposes for which such knowledge is used remain firmly situated within the maternal/feminine realm of nurtur- ing and caring consumption for the family. Despite shifts in discourse that appear to increasingly value mothers’ knowledge—there exists an enduring assumption that mothers should use their knowledge for domestic caring and consumption, ultimately reinforcing a heteronormativity of the use of women’s knowledge that subdues even expert knowledge for a domestic purpose.
Funding(s)
Discursive families: a comparison of magazine advertising in two countries  
Language
English
Keywords
Constructing motherhood
discourse analysis
hegemony of maternal knowledge
hegemony of maternity
maternal knowledge
motherhood
visual discourse analysis
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
HSG Profile Area
SHSS - Kulturen, Institutionen, Maerkte (KIM)
Refereed
Yes
Volume
published online first
Official URL
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1469540519889990
URL
https://www.alexandria.unisg.ch/handle/20.500.14171/97965
Subject(s)

social sciences

Division(s)

SfS - Institute of So...

SHSS - School of Huma...

Eprints ID
258414
File(s)
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open.access

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Davis et al_2019_The knowing mother_Journal of Consumer Culture.pdf

Size

276.55 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

a78b244b2f9be81bf82af79cb7aeff3f

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