Advertising, Sex, and Post-Socialism
Women, Media, and Femininity in the Balkans
By (author) Elza Ibroscheva Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville
Publication date:
20 June 2013Length of book:
220 pagesPublisher
Lexington BooksDimensions:
235x158mm6x9"
ISBN-13: 9780739172667
Advertising, Sex, and Post-Socialism explores the role of advertising and the consumption it promotes in changing cultural perceptions of sex and femininity across the Balkan region. Elza Ibroscheva theorizes how the marketing of gender identities that has taken place in the years of post-socialist transition has fundamentally affected the social, economic, and political positioning of women. Advertising is one of the major “factories” of cultural signification, and as such, serves as the most ubiquitous vessel of global norms of gendered selves. In addition, advertising serves as a literacy tool for learning the grammar of consumption, studying the ideologies of femininity and sex before and after the collapse of the socialist project, as well as the prevailing portrayals of femininity in advertising in present day Bulgaria. This book provides a revealing look at the mechanisms of how post-socialist norms of sexual behavior are being engendered, and what role media play in this transformative process.
Well-written, occasionally funny, yet scholarly sound, this Bulgarian story written with an insider's voice will dismantle for the reader myths about post/socialism and femininity, while offering alternative and surprising explanations and validations of human being's infinite capacity for imagination and survival.