It’s become one of the most overused words in the conversation around feminism, so how do we cut through “FAUXPOWERMENT” to find where the true power lies?
A QUARTER OF A CENTURY AGO – possibly your entire lifetime – I taught feminist theory at Oxford University. Back then, our poster-thinker was Judith Butler, whose most famous works argued that gender, sexuality and man and woman as biological entities could only be determined in performance – as it played out, so to speak. Our heroine argued this in language so convoluted it rendered us cross-eyed. How we fretted, how we thrilled.
Fast-forward to 2018, and I found myself gazing at some newly released gingerbread biscuits, Godfrey and Annie. Annie sports a frock and a red (lipsticked?) smile. However, according to their producer, neither are gingerbread men, making it clear they are gender-neutral biscuits. “Christ,” I thought, “We did this. A couple of decades on, our elaborate academic wranglings are being packaged and sold with a ‘Have a nice day.’”
It’s not just gingerbread snacks being deployed in the battleground for gender equality: in recent years, more and more brands are pushing supposedly empowering messages, often specifically aimed at women, to sell their products. As a journalist, I might receive 900 or so emails a day, legions of them banging the empowerment drum over the latest hair thickener or protein bar. Femvertising is nothing new (hell, there are even #Femvertising Awards) – lessons in female empowerment have been thrown at us from all corners of consumerism. Take the furore over Scottish brewer BrewDog’s pink “beer for girls”, launched for International Women’s Day – allegedly to highlight the gender pay gap – and lambasted for being the marketing gimmick it was.
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Esta historia es de la edición January/February 2019 de ELLE Australia.
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