6 results on '"WOMEN'S empowerment"'
Search Results
2. Discourse of Self-Empowerment in Ariana Grande's 'thank u, next' Album Lyrics: A Critical Discourse Analysis.
- Author
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Ruanglertsilp, Ekkarat
- Subjects
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CRITICAL discourse analysis , *SONG lyrics , *SELF-efficacy , *ACTIVISM , *WOMEN'S empowerment , *GENDER inequality - Abstract
Due to the increasing concern about gender equity in the U.S., song lyrics with political activism are receiving more attention. As reflected through lyrics and the artist's tumultuous life events, 'thank u, next,' Ariana Grande's fifth album, has been reviewed by media outlets, such as Billboard as mirroring Grande's public persona of self-empowerment. iTunes (2019) describes the album as Grande's embraced position of – 'complex, independent, tenacious and flawed.' This study investigates how these claims came about by adopting Fairclough's Critical Discourse Analysis three-dimensional framework. It examines how the discourse of self-empowerment is portrayed in her lyrics, and what linguistic strategies are deployed to portray the discourse. This study hopes to add texture to existing literature by examining the production of young women's empowerment ideology and the meanings of neoliberal feminism in relations to the use of language in song lyrics. Linguistic strategies such as the use of metaphors, overstatements and presupposition manipulation have been investigated through textual, and social analyses of the songs to demonstrate the ideological concepts of a 'self-empowered woman'. The concepts found include independence, self-love/growth, owning of sexuality, and being needy. The concepts also revealed that Grande's lyrics mostly support ideals of gender equity and female empowerment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. "Patchy Patriarchy" and the Shifting Fortunes of the CCP's Promise of Gender Equality since 1921.
- Author
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Evans, Harriet
- Subjects
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GENDER inequality , *PATRIARCHY , *GENDER differences (Sociology) , *WOMEN'S rights , *AGE groups , *WOMEN'S empowerment , *SELF-efficacy , *FORTUNE - Abstract
The CCP's commitment to gender equality since 1921 has produced vast gains in employment and education for countless women while overlooking established gender hierarchies in family life. Long-term research in Beijing reveals that crossing class, sectoral and generational differences, there is an apparent paradox between women's increasing access to education and employment and their abiding attachment to ideas and practices associated with their roles as wives, mothers and daughters-in-law. A reconfigured "patchy" form of patriarchy is sustained by a dominant discourse of gender difference that naturalizes women's association with the domestic sphere. Unprecedented engagements with international feminism after 1995 introduced new approaches to gender equality. Recently, young feminists from diverse backgrounds have launched public protests targeting expectations of women in marriage and family life, marking a contestation of previous articulations of gender equality. Online platforms are flooded with exchanges about women's empowerment in a market environment that grants them considerable leverage to manage their marital and domestic relationships. The focus of this new generation of feminists on social reproduction signifies a radical departure from the classical Marxist principles underpinning earlier approaches to women's emancipation. Nevertheless, a "patchy patriarchy" continues to characterize widely held gender assumptions and expectations, spanning class and sectoral difference. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Building a transformative feminist movement for women empowerment in Tanzania: the role of the Tanzania Gender Networking Programme (TGNP-Mtandao).
- Author
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Makulilo, Alexander Boniface and Bakari, Mohammed
- Subjects
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FEMINISM , *WOMEN'S empowerment , *SELF-efficacy , *GENDER , *NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations , *GENDER inequality - Abstract
Tanzania has, over the past two decades, made remarkable progress in terms of women's representation in the parliament. In the women in parliament rankings, Tanzania comes 23rd in the world and the 8th in Africa with 36.6% Members of Parliament. This achievement is largely a result of struggles by the women's movement in which a transformative feminist organization namely the Tanzania Gender Networking Programme (TGNP-Mtandao) is clearly singled out to have played a leading role. This paper provides a critical assessment of the contribution of TGNP-Mtandao in promoting women's representation and participation in decision-making processes in Tanzania. Specifically, it focuses to understand how TGNP's leadership style contributed change in the rules of the game towards the achievement of gender equality and women's political empowerment. In order to accomplish this endeavour, this work employed qualitative research so as to gain an in-depth understanding of gender issues in Tanzania's context. Data were collected mainly through interviews with key stakeholders from parliamentarians and non-governmental organizations. Moreover, election reports, evaluation reports, gender reports, and legislations were reviewed to provide secondary data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Empoderamento e equidade de género: os desafios atuais da mulher moçambicana.
- Author
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Tendai Chingore, Tiago
- Subjects
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WOMEN'S empowerment , *FEMINISM , *GENDER inequality , *WOMEN'S sexual behavior , *SELF-efficacy , *MARRIAGE , *REPRESENTATIVE government , *TASK performance - Abstract
This article aims to address "gender empowerment and equity: the current challenges for women in Mozambique". Their political representation can be seen with a continuous process of disputes, controversies and, in recent decades, some progress in terms of formal equality. It means that women currently have the legal right to participate and represent political bodies. Contemporary women, from their achievements in various social, cultural, economic and political aspects, are faced with the need to reformulate their roles in the performance of tasks related to marriage, motherhood, family, sexuality and their career professional. The central objective is to analyze the contributions made by women to their empowerment and gender equity, looking at the main challenges they face today. The contribution of his ideas to Mozambican women is due, on the one hand, to institutional factors such as democratization, gender quotas and electoral systems; on the other, the new women's movements, regional and international, which resurfaced in the early 1990s, marked the debate of the Conference on Women in Beijing. The research is basically theoretical, starting from the bibliographic analysis of the works that deal with the subject, accompanied by the deconstruction that allowed the reading, interpretation and understanding of the texts. As a result, we hope that the text can contribute positively to rethink Mondlane, today, taking into account the idea of emancipation, economic empowerment and gender equity of Mozambican women who had this activist as their main promoter and the first steps in building education for all. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. "A bulletin board of dreams": corporate empowerment promotion and feminist implications.
- Author
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Tornhill, Sofie
- Subjects
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GENDER inequality , *FEMINISM , *SELF-efficacy , *NEOLIBERALISM - Abstract
This article examines the premises of corporate solutions to gender inequality in the Global South. In feminist debates, businesses' increasing emphasis on women's empowerment has been discussed both in terms of increasing feminist impact and the co-optation of feminist demands. To explore the ideological effects of corporate gender practices, focus is placed on the Coca-Cola Company's global "5by20" campaign, which has the stated aim to empower five million women as small-scale entrepreneurs around the world and, in a "win-win" fashion, to double sales by 2020. Based on interviews and participatory observations in Mexico, this article traces a particular narrative of empowerment, envisioned as a transition from dependency to self-sufficiency and threatened by psychological and cultural restraints rather than material conditions. It shows that self-help and positive thinking are essential affective drives, thus reinforcing market-based, individualized development strategies. In response to feminist debates, the article concludes that corporate gender practices can be seen as part of a neoliberal transposition of equality concerns from a political to an economic domain. In effect, when initiatives such as 5by20 promote the accumulation of "human capital" to enhance gender equality, they simultaneously work to legitimize the inequalities that are necessarily entailed in competitive capitalism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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