[BOOK][B] Capitalizing on the curse: The business of menstruation

EA Kissling - 2006 - degruyter.com
EA Kissling
2006degruyter.com
Although a regular occurrence for millions of women, menstruation is typically represented
in US culture as an illness or a shameful episode--to the benefit of an entire industry.
Elizabeth Kissling reveals how corporations capitalize on long-standing negative attitudes
about menses to sell solutions for nonexistent problems. The commercialization of
menstruation, Kissling acknowledges, has in many ways been positive: women embrace
readily available, reasonably priced, and easy-to-use products with good reason. But it has …
Although a regular occurrence for millions of women, menstruation is typically represented in US culture as an illness or a shameful episode--to the benefit of an entire industry. Elizabeth Kissling reveals how corporations capitalize on long-standing negative attitudes about menses to sell solutions for nonexistent problems. The commercialization of menstruation, Kissling acknowledges, has in many ways been positive: women embrace readily available, reasonably priced, and easy-to-use products with good reason. But it has also been one of the worst things to happen to women. Documenting how industry advertising portrays women as" the weaker sex," Kissling explores the profound gender bias inherent in--and reinforced by--the business of menstruation.
De Gruyter