Welcome!Login or Register
Bitch Magazine
  • About Us
  • Browse
  • Blogs
  • Magazine
  • Subscribe
  • Search
  • Donate
  • Activism
  • Art
  • Books
  • Broadcast
  • Consumer culture
  • Film
  • Internet culture
  • Music
  • Social commentary

Browse

Twelve years of Bitch wrapped in a friendly interactive interface.

Current search

You're browsing:
[×] Consumer culture

Guided search

Department

:
all » Consumer culture

Content type

  • Article (5)

Date authored

  • 2005 (1)
  • 2003 (3)
  • 1999 (1)

Tags

  • advertising (3)
  • body image (2)
  • appetite (1)
  • beauty (1)
  • beauty products (1)
  • cognitive development (1)
  • computers (1)
  • craving (1)
  • diet (1)
  • eating (1)
  • eating disorders (1)
  • fashion (1)
  • food (1)
  • games (1)
  • gaming (1)
  • geeks (1)
  • gender (1)
  • gender roles (1)
  • guilt (1)
  • hunger (1)
  • more...
5 results

Results

Beyond the Valley of the Geeks

Notes on Gender and Gaming
Beyond the Valley of the Geeks
Article by Jacqueline Lalley, appeared in issue Fun & Games; filed under: Consumer culture; tagged: cognitive development, computers, games, gaming, geeks, gender roles, jocks, math, play, science, sims, stereotypes, tech, video games.

“When I started out, gaming was a geek thing,” says Sean (not his real name), a 38-year-old senior director of product development for a major electronic game publisher. “Now, it’s totally mainstream. It’s clear there’s money to be made.”

It’s not like there’s any nostalgia in his voice. With a six-figure salary and a generous bonus, Sean is one of those making the money. Electronic games—which encompass both computer games and console-based games—generated nearly $10 billion in revenue last year, thanks in part to top-selling titles like Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, Madden NFL 2005, ESPN NFL 2K5, and NBA Live 2005.

Given the fact that electronic games have their roots in geekdom, the sheer jock/thug appeal of the above-listed games is striking. You’d think that geek boys, having been a) persecuted by jocks and bullies and b) heavily involved in the production of electronic games, might take advantage of the latter to redress the former. But somewhere between Pong and Madden, those geeks began spending their days and nights creating universes in which testosterone rules, in the process reinforcing the gender roles that made their young lives hell.

What happened?

Read
Share
Close
  • Social Web
  • E-Mail
Delicious DeliciousDigg DiggStumbleUpon StumbleUponFacebook Facebook
Enter one address or multiple addresses separated with commas.
0 comments

Beauty and the Feast

The Cosmetic Industry's Female Feeding Frenzy
Beauty and the Feast
Article by Juliana Tringali, Illustrated by Carrie Christian, appeared in issue Taste & Appetite; filed under: Consumer culture; tagged: advertising, appetite, beauty, beauty products, craving, diet, eating, food, guilt, hunger, skin care.

The first thing you see is food. a breastlike dome of cake towers at the top of t­he ad, frosted pink with a raspberry on top. “It’s like dessert for your legs,” declares the text, and just in case this copy wasn’t clear, below it a pair of cellulite-free gams balances a bottle of Skintimate After-Shave Gel in lieu of icing.

Read
Share
Close
  • Social Web
  • E-Mail
Delicious DeliciousDigg DiggStumbleUpon StumbleUponFacebook Facebook
Enter one address or multiple addresses separated with commas.
0 comments

Editors' Letter: Taste & Appetite

Appetite for Deconstruction

From the ancient Greeks to the current Queer Eyes, the cocktail of knowledge, ideals, aesthetics, and manners that makes up the concept of taste has served as a tireless organizing principle for a class-based society (and really, is there any other kind?). Like all organizing principles, taste is a construction rather than a law of nature: It’s almost impossible to say why, for instance, we believe it’s in good taste to put flatware in a certain order, or in bad taste to wear vinyl pants to your cousin’s wedding. 


Read
Share
Close
  • Social Web
  • E-Mail
Delicious DeliciousDigg DiggStumbleUpon StumbleUponFacebook Facebook
Enter one address or multiple addresses separated with commas.
0 comments

Bodies of Work

Lisa Jervis talks to philosopher Susan Bordo
An interview with Susan Bordo by Lisa Jervis, appeared in issue Maturity & Immaturity; filed under: Consumer culture; tagged: advertising, body image, eating disorders, gender, media.
“Analysis is hard, it’s complicated, and it disturbs the comfortable simplicity of familiar worldviews.” So writes Susan Bordo, professor of English and women’s studies at the University of Kentucky. And she should know: Her incisive writings on a wide variety of topics cut through thickets of controversy and rhetoric to produce a fine, elegant, and, above all, resonant analysis.
Read
Share
Close
  • Social Web
  • E-Mail
Delicious DeliciousDigg DiggStumbleUpon StumbleUponFacebook Facebook
Enter one address or multiple addresses separated with commas.
0 comments

Ten Things to Hate About Jane

Article by Andi Zeisler, Lisa Jervis, Rita Hao, appeared in issue Fighting Back; filed under: Consumer culture; tagged: advertising, body image, fashion, Jane, magazines, publishing, sassy.

When we heard that Jane Pratt, the former editor of Sassy—the sharp, celebrated teen mag that above all was absolutely unwilling to pull its readers into the spiral of insecurity and product consumption so endemic to all others in the genre—was launching a new grown-up glossy, we, along with other feminist pop culture junkies nationwide, squealed with excitement. Then Jane launched. And we weren’t excited anymore. Here’s why.

Read
Share
Close
  • Social Web
  • E-Mail
Delicious DeliciousDigg DiggStumbleUpon StumbleUponFacebook Facebook
Enter one address or multiple addresses separated with commas.
0 comments

Email List Signup

Latest Issue

Current Issue Cover ImageSubscribe  |  Look Inside

Most Popular

Most Discussed
  • I really really really can't stress strongly enough
  • Multiply & Conquer
  • The A-word in popular media: A plea for help
  • Big Trouble
  • Learning Curve
Most Read
  • Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Feminism But Were Afraid to Ask
  • Mad Science
  • Hard Times
  • Genesis
  • Multiply & Conquer

Recent comments

  • evil twin
    Samantha Bee—Proud 'Vagina American'
    dawn jones
  • I don't think the 'staches are...
    'Stache-tastic!
    arielle115
  • You know, dear Vanessa,
    The Collapsible Woman
    Agata
  • exclusive movements
    Gender Blender: Male privilege
    catSCRATCHfever
  • I am also sick of all these
    And speaking of MySpace...
    likeblankpages

Bitch Radio

Episode 1: Wired and Inspired
Bitch's first foray into audio
Syndicate contentiTunes_sm_bdg.png

sidebar-ad-free-blog.png

  • About Us
    • Staff
    • Our history
    • Founders
    • FAQs
    • Get involved
    • Contact
    • Press
    • Bitchfest
  • Browse
    • Activism
    • Art
    • Books
    • Broadcast
    • Consumer culture
    • Film
    • Internet culture
    • Music
    • Social commentary
  • Blogs
    • Love / Shove
    • Dogged Pessimism
    • Delightfully Cranky
    • B-sides
    • Minnesota Nice
    • Sm[art]
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Subscribe
    • Back Issues
    • Advertise
    • Contributor's Guidelines
    • Where to Buy
    • Customer Service
  • Subscribe
  • Search
  • Donate

Be our friend?

  • facebook.png Facebook
  • myspace_icon.png MySpace
  • stumbleit.png StumbleUpon
  • youtube_icon.png YouTube
  • delicious_icon.jpg del.icio.us
  • flickr_icon_.jpg Flickr
© 2008 B-word Worldwide | Content wrangling by Kyla Wagener | Website by Quilted