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1
Teenagers' perceptions of communication and "good communication" with peers, young adults, and older adults
Williams, Angela Marian; Garrett, Peter Donald. - : Taylor & Francis, 2012
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2
Ageing well? Older people's health and well being as portrayed in UK magazine advertisements
Ylänne, Virpi; Williams, Angela Marian; Wadleigh, Paul Mark. - : Linköping University Electronic Press, 2010
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3
Portrayals of older adults in UK magazine advertisements: Relevance of target audience
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4
Age-category boundaries and social identity strategies: Moving the goalposts
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5
Accessing social meanings: Values of keywords, values in keywords
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6
Investigating language attitudes: social meanings of dialect, ethnicity and performance
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7
Conflicting discourses, shifting ideologies: Pharmaceutical, 'alternative' and feminist emancipatory texts on the menopause
Coupland, Justine; Williams, Angela Marian. - : SAGE Publications, 2002
Abstract: This article uses a close pragmatic analysis to examine three discourses of the menopause, each with identifiably different health and lifespan ideologies, each used to further its own set of economic and/or political agendas. We argue that these texts have potentially powerful influential effects on women’s interpretations of their own ‘change of life’. Discourse 1 (the ‘pharmaceutical’ discourse) is represented by pharmaceutical brochures, which construct the menopause as medical ‘pathology’ caused by physiological decrement and generally advocate correcting or suppressing symptoms by ‘treatment’ with hormone replacement therapy (HRT). Discourse 2 (the ‘alternative’ therapy discourse) as represented in popular printed media texts, rejects both subjection to medical/pharmaceutical intervention, and many of the claims made for HRT, and recommends that women take personal and active ‘control’ by using ‘natural’ remedies and making lifestyle adjustments. Although in ideological conflict, both these discourses are arguably ageist in their reproduction of negative perceptions of menopause. Discourse 3 (the emancipatory feminist discourse) reconstructs the menopause as a positively significant rite of passage – a time of re-evaluation and new-found freedom. Like Discourse 2, feminist discourse rejects the medicalization of menopause and the claims Discourse 1 makes for HRT. But, in addition, Discourse 3 rejects the dominant medical view of the cultural meaning of menopause, with the end of menstruation entextualized as gain, rather than loss, and redefines female midlife as a time of new freedom, wisdom and personal insight.
Keyword: HQ The family. Marriage. Woman; RG Gynecology and obstetrics
URL: http://das.sagepub.com/content/13/4/419.abstract
http://orca.cf.ac.uk/3629/
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