

An edition of Decoding Women's Magazines (1992)
from "Mademoiselle" to "Ms"
By Ellen McCracken
Publish Date
1993
Publisher
Macmillan
Language
eng
Pages
341
Description:
Comprising the largest of magazine categories in the United States, nearly fifty glossy publications addressed to women appear monthly on news-stands. They are a multi-million-dollar business and essential to the marketing of commodities in the consumer society. At the same time, they present to readers a master narrative about the world, an ostensibly women-centred account of reality that links the utopian to the everyday. The multiple mini-narratives that begin on the front covers and extend to the ads and features inside combine to offer a highly pleasurable, appealing consensus about the feminine. Decoding Women's Magazines studies the contradictory semiotic structures at work within and between purchased ads, covert ads, and editorial features in such genres as the beauty and fashion magazines, the service and home titles, those aimed at minority audiences, new female workers, and women with special interests and spending power. Whether addressing readers as Mademoiselle or Ms., contemporary women's magazines employ similar textual strategies to conflate commodities and desire, and thereby attain immense circulations and profits.
subjects: Women's periodicals, American, Themes, motives, Illustrations, Popular culture, Magazine illustration, Women consumers, Advertising, Periodicals, Vrouwenbladen, Beeldvorming, Women's periodicals, Popular culture, united states, Advertising, periodicals, Consumers, united states, Womenʾs periodicals, American
Places: United States
Times: 20th century