Antiféminisme sur papier glacé

With his book The Rhetoric of Reaction: Perversity, Futility, Jeopardy published in 1991, economist Albert O. Hirschman offered an analysis of different rhetorics against social changes (French revolution, universal suffrage and welfare state). His frame of analysis and the three thesis (perversity,...

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Main Author: Auréline Cardoso
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Association Genres, sexualités, langage 2018-07-01
Series:Glad!
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/glad/1033
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author Auréline Cardoso
author_facet Auréline Cardoso
author_sort Auréline Cardoso
collection DOAJ
description With his book The Rhetoric of Reaction: Perversity, Futility, Jeopardy published in 1991, economist Albert O. Hirschman offered an analysis of different rhetorics against social changes (French revolution, universal suffrage and welfare state). His frame of analysis and the three thesis (perversity, futility, jeopardy) he uncovered in reactionary speeches have often been used in researches about antifeminist rhetoric. This article intends to show how one can find that type of rhetoric in women’s magazines. The futility thesis is used in articles explaining why gender equality seems to be out of reach within heterosexual couples; the perversity thesis shapes an antifeminist rhetoric about how women’s self-reliance would, after all, harm women. The articles dealing with men convey many masculinist ideas, using the jeopardy thesis to speak in favour of a “masculinity crisis”.
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institution Kabale University
issn 2551-0819
language fra
publishDate 2018-07-01
publisher Association Genres, sexualités, langage
record_format Article
series Glad!
spelling doaj-art-bc93e01c6766489792f8f9c8b432a71a2025-01-30T10:36:20ZfraAssociation Genres, sexualités, langageGlad!2551-08192018-07-01410.4000/glad.1033Antiféminisme sur papier glacéAuréline CardosoWith his book The Rhetoric of Reaction: Perversity, Futility, Jeopardy published in 1991, economist Albert O. Hirschman offered an analysis of different rhetorics against social changes (French revolution, universal suffrage and welfare state). His frame of analysis and the three thesis (perversity, futility, jeopardy) he uncovered in reactionary speeches have often been used in researches about antifeminist rhetoric. This article intends to show how one can find that type of rhetoric in women’s magazines. The futility thesis is used in articles explaining why gender equality seems to be out of reach within heterosexual couples; the perversity thesis shapes an antifeminist rhetoric about how women’s self-reliance would, after all, harm women. The articles dealing with men convey many masculinist ideas, using the jeopardy thesis to speak in favour of a “masculinity crisis”.https://journals.openedition.org/glad/1033women’s magazinesmasculinismantifeminism
spellingShingle Auréline Cardoso
Antiféminisme sur papier glacé
Glad!
women’s magazines
masculinism
antifeminism
title Antiféminisme sur papier glacé
title_full Antiféminisme sur papier glacé
title_fullStr Antiféminisme sur papier glacé
title_full_unstemmed Antiféminisme sur papier glacé
title_short Antiféminisme sur papier glacé
title_sort antifeminisme sur papier glace
topic women’s magazines
masculinism
antifeminism
url https://journals.openedition.org/glad/1033
work_keys_str_mv AT aurelinecardoso antifeminismesurpapierglace