Gender, Health, and Popular Culture
Historical Perspectives
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Order online and receive a 25% discount $34.95 Paper, 330 pp. ISBN13: 978-1-55458-217-4 Release Date: |
Book Description
Health is a gendered concept in Western cultures. Customarily it is associated with strength in men and beauty in women. This gendered concept was transmitted through visual representations of the ideal female and male bodies, and ubiquitous media images resulted in the absorption of universal standards of beauty and health and generalized desires to achieve them. Today, genuine or self-styled expertsfrom physicians to newspaper columnists to advertisersoffer advice on achieving optimal health.
Topics in this collection are wide ranging and include childbirth advice in Victorian Australia and Cold War America, menstruation films, Canadian abortion tourism, the Pap smear, the Body Worlds exhibition, and fat liberation. Masculinity is explored among drunkards in antebellum Philadelphia and family memoirs during the 1980s AIDS epidemic. Seemingly objective public health advisories are shown to be as influenced by commercial interests, class, gender, and other social differentiations as marketing approaches are, and the message presented is mediated to varying degrees by those receiving it.
This book will be of interest to scholars in women’s studies, health studies, marketing, media studies, social history and anthropology, and popular culture.
About Cheryl Krasnick Warsh
Cheryl Krasnick Warsh teaches history at Vancouver Island University and is the former editor-in-chief of the Canadian Bulletin of Medical History. A former Fulbright and Hannah Fellow, her books include Moments of Unreason: The Practice of Canadian Psychiatry and the Homewood Retreat, 18831923, Drink in Canada: Historical Essays, Children’s Health Issues in Historical Perspective (WLU Press, 2005), and Prescribed Norms: Women and Health in Canada and the United States since 1800.
Reviews
“Krasnick Warsh’s edited collection succeeds in providing a wide variety of interesting analyses that examine the historical intersections of gender, health, and popular culture.”
— Rebecca Godderis, Wilfrid Laurier University, Canadian Bulletin of Medical History
“This important work will be a welcome addition to the literature, especially in the North American context, where most of the essays are situated. No other work attempts to draw together these disparate fields of study, and the volume’s inclusion of popular culture is what makes it so truly innovative.”
— Jane Nicholas, Lakehead University, Thunder Bay, ON
“Taken together, these essays provide sophisticated models for exploring the interplay between health and gender as represented in popular culture.... Although the majority of articles focus on Canadian developments, the North American breadth creates space for comparative studies, such as the one explored in the side-by-side articles on cervial cancer screening programs in the US and Canada. The book will likely appeal to a wide variety of readers with interests in health, feminism, reproduction, and body politics and offers a provocative collection of historically engaging and historiographically rich articles.”
— Erika Dyck, University of Saskatchewan, Labour / Le Travail
Related interest
By the same editor
Children’s Health Issues in Historical Perspective, Cheryl Krasnick Warsh, editor, and Veronica Strong-Boag, editor


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