Masculinity Representation in Lithuanian Interwar Press Advertising

The analysis of this article focuses on normative interwar masculinity images. As advertising is an integral part of modern society revealing its face, the analysis is based on press advertisements collected from interwar magazines. Hegemonic features such as: a super man, a successful careerist, t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gabija Bankauskaitė-Sereikienė, Raminta Stravinskaitė
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Vilnius University 2016-10-01
Series:Respectus Philologicus
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.zurnalai.vu.lt/respectus-philologicus/article/view/13588
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spelling doaj-35d9bee423284b0ab6afbf5fc1f266772020-11-25T00:37:05ZengVilnius University Respectus Philologicus1392-82952335-23882016-10-01303510.15388/RESPECTUS.2016.30.35.14Masculinity Representation in Lithuanian Interwar Press AdvertisingGabija Bankauskaitė-Sereikienė0Raminta Stravinskaitė1Vilnius UniversityVilnius University The analysis of this article focuses on normative interwar masculinity images. As advertising is an integral part of modern society revealing its face, the analysis is based on press advertisements collected from interwar magazines. Hegemonic features such as: a super man, a successful careerist, the man of a family, a hedonistic and narcissistic man were analysed. The analysis is focused on verbal and non-verbal expressions. The results have shown that the image of a super man was mostly related to the body and its size, ability to do a hard work. Main details – classic suit and luxury attribute such as a car usually represented a good social status and described a man as a successful careerist. It was noted that during the interwar period hegemonic masculinity was expressed by self-confidence. It was represented by a hedonistic, level-headed man images. The construct of the patriarch of the family started to be criticized during the interwar period and was slowly replaced by a new image of a careful man and husband. http://www.zurnalai.vu.lt/respectus-philologicus/article/view/13588advertisingmasculinitynormativehegemonicstereotype
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gabija Bankauskaitė-Sereikienė
Raminta Stravinskaitė
spellingShingle Gabija Bankauskaitė-Sereikienė
Raminta Stravinskaitė
Masculinity Representation in Lithuanian Interwar Press Advertising
Respectus Philologicus
advertising
masculinity
normative
hegemonic
stereotype
author_facet Gabija Bankauskaitė-Sereikienė
Raminta Stravinskaitė
author_sort Gabija Bankauskaitė-Sereikienė
title Masculinity Representation in Lithuanian Interwar Press Advertising
title_short Masculinity Representation in Lithuanian Interwar Press Advertising
title_full Masculinity Representation in Lithuanian Interwar Press Advertising
title_fullStr Masculinity Representation in Lithuanian Interwar Press Advertising
title_full_unstemmed Masculinity Representation in Lithuanian Interwar Press Advertising
title_sort masculinity representation in lithuanian interwar press advertising
publisher Vilnius University
series Respectus Philologicus
issn 1392-8295
2335-2388
publishDate 2016-10-01
description The analysis of this article focuses on normative interwar masculinity images. As advertising is an integral part of modern society revealing its face, the analysis is based on press advertisements collected from interwar magazines. Hegemonic features such as: a super man, a successful careerist, the man of a family, a hedonistic and narcissistic man were analysed. The analysis is focused on verbal and non-verbal expressions. The results have shown that the image of a super man was mostly related to the body and its size, ability to do a hard work. Main details – classic suit and luxury attribute such as a car usually represented a good social status and described a man as a successful careerist. It was noted that during the interwar period hegemonic masculinity was expressed by self-confidence. It was represented by a hedonistic, level-headed man images. The construct of the patriarch of the family started to be criticized during the interwar period and was slowly replaced by a new image of a careful man and husband.
topic advertising
masculinity
normative
hegemonic
stereotype
url http://www.zurnalai.vu.lt/respectus-philologicus/article/view/13588
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