Deconstructing the legacy of the 'Savage' woman : the politics of displacing boundaries of difference in Panache magazine

This thesis deconstructs the notion of the 'savage' woman by focusing on the case of Saartje Baartman nicknamed the 'Hottentot Venus'. Deemed a denigrated African woman, she was displayed and studied in Europe by Enlightenment's scientists. Such studies were pivotal in defin...

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Main Author: Abraham, Christiana
Format: Others
Published: 2001
Online Access:http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/1508/1/MQ64010.pdf
Abraham, Christiana <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Abraham=3AChristiana=3A=3A.html> (2001) Deconstructing the legacy of the 'Savage' woman : the politics of displacing boundaries of difference in Panache magazine. Masters thesis, Concordia University.
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-QMG.15082013-10-22T03:41:31Z Deconstructing the legacy of the 'Savage' woman : the politics of displacing boundaries of difference in Panache magazine Abraham, Christiana This thesis deconstructs the notion of the 'savage' woman by focusing on the case of Saartje Baartman nicknamed the 'Hottentot Venus'. Deemed a denigrated African woman, she was displayed and studied in Europe by Enlightenment's scientists. Such studies were pivotal in defining her 'anatomical difference', and became the foundation of philosophies, and stereotypes that have defined images of non-European women for the centuries that followed. This case study examines how layers of acquired discourses developed through an ideology of 'otherness'. By locating media practice as central to the reproduction of knowledge, this thesis points to how the legacy of this ideology of difference has become an intricate part of contemporary print media practice. This knowledge is readily accessible through the reproduction of stereotypical representations of world majority women in mainstream fashion magazines. This thesis, therefore, explores how the naturalization of the knowledge of 'otherness' in media practice is challenged through an analysis of Panache magazine. Panache is a fashion and lifestyle magazine for world majority women that locates women other than 'white' and 'western' as its central subject and audience. This thesis places the construction of the 'savage' woman as the historical legacy that Panache magazine seeks to tackle. The thesis analyses how Panache magazine conducts its kind of resistance within the confining boundaries of the women's magazine genre. It looks at how problematic resistance can become. At the same time, it also assesses the importance of media resistance in the production of counter-ideologies and discourses. 2001 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/1508/1/MQ64010.pdf Abraham, Christiana <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Abraham=3AChristiana=3A=3A.html> (2001) Deconstructing the legacy of the 'Savage' woman : the politics of displacing boundaries of difference in Panache magazine. Masters thesis, Concordia University. http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/1508/
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description This thesis deconstructs the notion of the 'savage' woman by focusing on the case of Saartje Baartman nicknamed the 'Hottentot Venus'. Deemed a denigrated African woman, she was displayed and studied in Europe by Enlightenment's scientists. Such studies were pivotal in defining her 'anatomical difference', and became the foundation of philosophies, and stereotypes that have defined images of non-European women for the centuries that followed. This case study examines how layers of acquired discourses developed through an ideology of 'otherness'. By locating media practice as central to the reproduction of knowledge, this thesis points to how the legacy of this ideology of difference has become an intricate part of contemporary print media practice. This knowledge is readily accessible through the reproduction of stereotypical representations of world majority women in mainstream fashion magazines. This thesis, therefore, explores how the naturalization of the knowledge of 'otherness' in media practice is challenged through an analysis of Panache magazine. Panache is a fashion and lifestyle magazine for world majority women that locates women other than 'white' and 'western' as its central subject and audience. This thesis places the construction of the 'savage' woman as the historical legacy that Panache magazine seeks to tackle. The thesis analyses how Panache magazine conducts its kind of resistance within the confining boundaries of the women's magazine genre. It looks at how problematic resistance can become. At the same time, it also assesses the importance of media resistance in the production of counter-ideologies and discourses.
author Abraham, Christiana
spellingShingle Abraham, Christiana
Deconstructing the legacy of the 'Savage' woman : the politics of displacing boundaries of difference in Panache magazine
author_facet Abraham, Christiana
author_sort Abraham, Christiana
title Deconstructing the legacy of the 'Savage' woman : the politics of displacing boundaries of difference in Panache magazine
title_short Deconstructing the legacy of the 'Savage' woman : the politics of displacing boundaries of difference in Panache magazine
title_full Deconstructing the legacy of the 'Savage' woman : the politics of displacing boundaries of difference in Panache magazine
title_fullStr Deconstructing the legacy of the 'Savage' woman : the politics of displacing boundaries of difference in Panache magazine
title_full_unstemmed Deconstructing the legacy of the 'Savage' woman : the politics of displacing boundaries of difference in Panache magazine
title_sort deconstructing the legacy of the 'savage' woman : the politics of displacing boundaries of difference in panache magazine
publishDate 2001
url http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/1508/1/MQ64010.pdf
Abraham, Christiana <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Abraham=3AChristiana=3A=3A.html> (2001) Deconstructing the legacy of the 'Savage' woman : the politics of displacing boundaries of difference in Panache magazine. Masters thesis, Concordia University.
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