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Journal articles on the topic 'Lifestyle magazines'

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1

Mikosza, Janine. "In Search of the ‘Mysterious’ Australian Male: Editorial Practices in Men's Lifestyle Magazines." Media International Australia 107, no. 1 (May 2003): 134–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x0310700113.

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The men's lifestyle magazines FHM (For Him Magazine) and Ralph are a significant presence in the Australian market, and both target a specific readership of young, heterosexual men. My central research question concerns how desired audiences are constructed or imagined at the ‘front end’ of magazine production. One of the major tasks of the editors and publishers of these magazines is to access, and compete for, an audience. This paper aims to examine the contradictions apparent in the editorial practices of defining or envisioning an audience for Ralph and FHM. To understand the process of how they produce the magazines, I examine the editorial staffs' conceptions of the ‘audience’; the ways in which it is created and for what purposes, as well as the terms used to describe this integral part of the industry. How the audience is defined and constructed highlights how contradictions, creativity and constraint operate in defining the audience.
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2

Lewis, Reina. "Looking Good: The Lesbian Gaze and Fashion Imagery." Feminist Review 55, no. 1 (March 1997): 92–109. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/fr.1997.6.

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This paper is concerned with the different forms of pleasure and identification activated in the consumption of dominant and subcultural print media. It centres on an analysis of the lesbian visual pleasures generated through the reading of fashion editorial in the new lesbian and gay lifestyle magazines. This consideration of the lesbian gaze is contrasted to the lesbian visual pleasures obtained from an against the grain reading of mainstream women's fashion magazines. The development of the lesbian and gay lifestyle magazines, in the context of the pink pound, produces a situation in which an eroticized lesbian visual pleasure is the overt remit of the magazine, rather than a clandestine pleasure obtained through a transgressive reading of dominant cultural imagery. In contrast to the polysemic free-play of fashion fantasy by which readers produce lesbian pleasure in the consumption of mainstream magazines, responses to the fashion content in the lesbian magazine Diva suggest that in a subcultural context readers deploy a realist mode of reading that demands a monosemic positive images iconography. The article uses the concept of subcultural competency to consider the different ways lesbians read mainstream and subcultural print media and suggests that the conflict over Diva‘s fashion spreads may be linked to changing patterns of identification and the use of dress for recognizability.
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Schirato, Tony, and Susan Yell. "The ‘New’ Men's Magazines and the Performance of Masculinity." Media International Australia 92, no. 1 (August 1999): 81–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x9909200110.

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In Australia in the 1990s, following on from the phenomenon of the ‘new woman's magazine', a new market in lifestyle magazines for men has emerged, distinct from magazines such as Penthouse, Playboy and Picture. This paper examines the phenomenon of the ‘new’ men's magazines, and argues that these magazines are a site in which contemporary performances of masculinities can be analysed, just as feminist and other analyses have examined and critiqued the production of feminine subjectivities through women's magazines. We introduce the market positioning and profile of these magazines, then analyse shifts in the available discourses for constructing masculine subjectivities as they are exemplified in one of the most successful of these magazines, Ralph. Making use of Judith Butler's concept of performance and her critique of Pierre Bourdieu's notion of the habitus, toe analyse a story in Ralph, concluding that Ralph's performances of ‘stereotypical’ masculinity are self-conscious ‘over-performances’ of a set of discourses and subjectivities which it recognises are already in a sense obsolete.
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Nevinskaitė, Laima. "Multilingual Advertising in Lithuanian Magazines in 1993–2013." Taikomoji kalbotyra, no. 3 (March 2, 2015): 1–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.15388/tk.2014.17474.

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The article presents a quantitative analysis of multilingual advertising in Lithuanian magazines 1993–2013. The analysis includes those advertisements where alongside Lithuanian separate elements in a foreign language are used, and monolingual non-Lithuanian advertising. The sample included advertisements from four magazines of different profiles (a news magazine, a TV magazine, a women’s magazine, and a business lifestyle magazine) from years 1993/1994, 1998, 2003 and 2013, in total 1995 unique advertisements.A general conclusion is made that the amount of multilingual advertising in Lithuanian magazines has increased. Although as early as 1993/1994 the magazines contained a fair amount of non-Lithuanian advertisements, those years were atypical, since non-Lithuanian advertisements were by Lithuanian advertisers mostly and the models of bilingual advertisements were different than the models that prevailed in the later periods. In 1998 there were less non-Lithuanian advertisements than in 1993/1994 and since then their amount was continuously increasing. The trend of increase of multilingual advertising is best confirmed not by the dynamics of its amounts in single magazines, which was different from magazine to magazine, but by its increase within separate product categories and within the flow of advertisements by Lithuanian companies.In 2013, the proportion of non-Lithuanian advertisements in different magazines, without including into this number the names of companies and products, was 11–42 percent. The use of other languages in advertisements was related to product category (the biggest amount of non-Lithuanian advertisements were in categories associated with prestige, modernity, technological progress, and certain lifestyles); country of origin (advertisements by foreign producers were more likely to contain foreign text elements); size (full-page advertisements were more likely to be bi- or multilingual); structure (monolingual non-Lithuanian advertisements predominantly contained company/product name only or company/product name plus slogan/product type).English is the most often used foreign language in Lithuanian advertisements; French, German, Italian are also used; some other languages are used in single cases only. English is used by advertisers from all countries of origin and it is used mostly to create a modern identity of the brand. Other languages, judging by the product categories they are used in, are associated with ethnocultural stereotypes of those countries.
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Benwell, Bethan. "Introduction: Masculinity and men's Lifestyle Magazines." Sociological Review 51, no. 1_suppl (May 2003): 6–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-954x.2003.tb03600.x.

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6

Jackson, Peter, Kate Brooks, and Nick Stevenson. "Making Sense of Men's Lifestyle Magazines." Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 17, no. 3 (June 1999): 353–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/d170353.

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7

Kwon, Hyun-ah, and Soomi Kim. "Characteristics of Residential Space in Response to Changed Lifestyles: Focusing on the Characteristics of Residents and the Relationship between Individual and Family." Sustainability 11, no. 7 (April 4, 2019): 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su11072006.

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The housing type of apartments, which has been spreading widely in South Korea, has penetrated deep into the domestic housing culture, thanks to the advantage of “convenience” resulting from the mass production of industrial capitalism that prioritizes functionality and efficiency. However, as capitalist social structures undergo transformation, in the 21st century, under a paradigm emphasizing creativity over functionality and efficiency, the characteristics of everyday life are also changing. Therefore, this study focuses on newly emerging lifestyles resulting from this transition of social structures. It analyzes the characteristics of residential space that reflect this trend, centering on “the characteristics of residents” and “the relationship between individual and family”. To this end, we compared lifestyle magazines aimed at the general public and architectural magazines aimed at architectural experts. Section 3 explores the changed lifestyles of residents by analyzing the articles containing interviews with residents in lifestyle magazines, while Section 4 focuses on the characteristics of residential spaces in reflecting these changes by analyzing houses and articles of architects and critics in architectural magazines. This analysis consistently brought forth the question of the limit of existing spaces of apartments and the desire to overcome them. A correspondence between residential spaces and the needs of everyday lives and lifestyles is a basic requirement for sustainable housing. Thus, the design of residential spaces will have to begin with a clear understanding of residents and their lifestyles, which can then be mapped onto the characteristics of residential spaces that can support them.
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Stevenson, Nick, Peter Jackson, and Kate Brooks. "The politics of ‘new’ men’s lifestyle magazines." European Journal of Cultural Studies 3, no. 3 (August 2000): 366–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/136754940000300301.

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9

Callahan, David. "Book Review: Masculinity and Men's Lifestyle Magazines." European Journal of Cultural Studies 8, no. 4 (November 2005): 521–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1367549405057832.

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Jachimiak, Peter. "Book Review: Masculinity and Men’s Lifestyle Magazines." Media, Culture & Society 28, no. 1 (January 2006): 151–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/016344370602800111.

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11

Řeháčková, Dana. "Construction of Masculinity in Men's Lifestyle Magazines." Czech Sociological Review 42, no. 2 (April 1, 2006): 291–306. http://dx.doi.org/10.13060/00380288.2006.42.2.04.

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Vanclay, Frank, and Bill Metcaff. "Alternative Lifestyle Magazines: An Analysis of Readers." Media Information Australia 36, no. 1 (May 1985): 49–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x8503600114.

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13

Kelly, Kathleen J., Michael D. Slater, David Karan, and Liza Hunn. "The Use of Human Models and Cartoon Characters in Magazine Advertisements for Cigarettes, Beer, and Nonalcoholic Beverages." Journal of Public Policy & Marketing 19, no. 2 (September 2000): 189–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.1509/jppm.19.2.189.17135.

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The authors examine the content of magazine advertising for cigarettes, beer, and nonalcoholic beverages from July 1996 to July 1997. A total of 476 advertisements (239 unique advertisements) from 12 different magazines were content-analyzed. In light of the ongoing debate and recent proposals over the regulation of tobacco and alcohol advertising aimed at young people, the purpose was to answer two principal questions: (1) whether the advertisements for cigarettes and beer contain more cartoons and animated characters than do advertisements for nonalcoholic beverages and (2) whether the presence of human models in an advertisement's visuals is an adequate way to operationalize a lifestyle advertisement. The authors also replicate and extend previous research regarding the amount and type of extrinsic appeal or lifestyle advertising found in these product categories. Significantly more lifestyle content appeared in cigarette advertisements than in nonalcoholic beverage advertisements. Furthermore, a disproportionate number of cartoon characters in cigarette advertisements appeared in magazines with a higher share of younger readers, consistent with policy concerns regarding the use of such cartoon characters to appeal to youth markets. Also, 8.8% of advertisements that were classified as lifestyle advertisements did not contain recognizable human models. An implication of this finding is that the original tobacco settlement proposal to eliminate lifestyle content of cigarette and beer advertisements simply by eliminating models was inadequate to achieve its intended purpose.
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Kwon, Hyun-ah, and Soomi Kim. "The Functions of Housing in Response to Changed Lifestyles in Korean Residential Spaces: A Comparative Analysis of the Cases in Lifestyle and Architectural Magazines." Sustainability 13, no. 21 (November 1, 2021): 12079. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su132112079.

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The housing type of apartments, spread widely across South Korea, has penetrated deep into its domestic housing culture, thanks to their advantages in terms of convenience, resulting from the mass production of industrial capitalism, which prioritizes functionality and efficiency. However, capitalist social structures have been undergoing transformation in the 21st century. Under a new paradigm emphasizing creativity over functionality and efficiency, the characteristics of everyday life are also changing. We started with the question of apartment spaces, which featured there are only basic minimum functions with simple combinations of similar rooms, without being able to capture the current changed lifestyle. Therefore, this study focuses on newly emerging lifestyles resulting from this transition of social structures and the characteristics of residential spaces at present, centering on the “function of housing”. Based on these considerations, we aimed to establish the essential function of housing that is prioritized by this era. To this end, we first looked at the changes in the functions of housing before and after modern times. We found that the functions of housing that were complex in traditional society have been differentiated and that houses have changed into a more private space along with the post-modern advent of urban public areas. However, the recent shift in social structure has led to the emergence of new lifestyles, which has also called for new functions of housing. Therefore, in this study, through the analysis of recent lifestyle magazines and architectural magazines, we compared the general public’s and architectural experts’ perspectives on the changed functions of housing and the characteristics of the required residential space. Accordingly, this research analyzed articles containing interviews with residents in lifestyle magazines and articles of architects and critics in architectural magazines. In addition to our previous literatures on changes in “characteristics of residents” and “relationship between individual and family”, this study will ignite discussions on contemporary urban housing from diverse and multi-layered levels as an attempt to achieve sustainable housing where residents’ everyday lives and their residential spaces match.
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15

Wenger, L. D. "Cigar magazines: using tobacco to sell a lifestyle." Tobacco Control 10, no. 3 (September 1, 2001): 279–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/tc.10.3.279.

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16

Cortese, Daniel K., M. Jane Lewis, and Pamela M. Ling. "Tobacco Industry Lifestyle Magazines Targeted to Young Adults." Journal of Adolescent Health 45, no. 3 (September 2009): 268–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jadohealth.2009.02.008.

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17

Nagy, Zita. "The playboy milieu in post-socialist Hungary." Corvinus Journal of Sociology and Social Policy 2, no. 2 (December 12, 2011): 67–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.14267/cjssp.2011.02.04.

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By the 1960s, consumer habits focused on the freedom of selfrealisation, independence and the spending of leisure time became solid values in American culture. Values related to sexuality went through dramatic changes and erotics became part of mass culture as magazines designed for men were introduced onto the market. Playboy magazine, the pioneer of a new segment of the printed press, was born in this environment. Read by masses of people, this magazine had a very strong influence on public life in the second half of the twentieth century, and also served as a model for new lifestyle magazines launched onto the gradually expanding publishing market. If we consider the changes taking place in society as being key to its overwhelming success, then the magazine and the set of values represented by it can be subject to scientific investigation. The purpose of this study is to prove the existence of this correlation by comparing the sociological characteristics of two societies situated in different geographic locations at different times.
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Savoie, Isabelle, Arminée Kazanjian, and Fern Brunger. "WOMEN, THE MEDIA, AND HEART DISEASE." International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care 15, no. 4 (October 1999): 729–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266462399154126.

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Objective: To analyze the nature and presentation of print media messages regarding cholesterol and heart disease in women. The hypothesis is that print media messages about cholesterol and heart disease may encourage and perpetuate the use of cholesterol-lowering drugs in women.Methods: A hand-search of the "seven sisters" of American women's magazines and of two Canadian women's magazines. All print material related to cholesterol and heart disease in women was photocopied and the content analyzed qualitatively. The print media content was divided into two categories: magazine articles and drug industry–sponsored advertisements. Themes were identified and were analyzed for the messages they contained about heart disease, cholesterol, and the use of cholesterol-lowering drugs in women.Results: From the magazine articles, three main messages were identified. First, heart disease is the number one killer of women. Second, women must demand recognition of their high risk of heart disease and demand equal access to prevention and treatment services for heart disease. Third, lifestyles changes are not enough. Cholesterol-lowering drugs should be considered. Drug advertisements also emphasize that postmenopausal women are at high risk of heart disease and that lifestyle changes are inadequate or insufficient to lower this risk. In both cases, high blood cholesterol is considered not as a risk factor for heart disease but as the disease itself.Conclusions: Magazine articles and drug advertisements act synergistically and may encourage and promote the use of cholesterol-lowering drugs in women. Postmenopausal women not on hormone therapy are particularly targeted.
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Castleberry, Stephen B., Kelley Bayuk, and A. Maureen O'Bryan. "We've Got A Cure For You! Disease Awareness Campaigns." Journal of Business Case Studies (JBCS) 4, no. 2 (February 1, 2008): 31–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.19030/jbcs.v4i2.4754.

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Over the last twenty years, the use of disease awareness campaigns has become predominant in our everyday lives. What started out as a technique to market lifestyle drugs for cosmetics and sexual enhancements in the 1980s and 1990s, has now increased in usage to include many other areas of medicine. Its not uncommon to see drug advertisements in consumer magazines and on television for everything from psychotropic drugs, to drugs that are intended to improve the quality of everyday life for more average Americans. Indeed, its hard to find a popular press magazine that doesnt have at least one such advertisement, while most magazine issues have many such advertisements.
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Wheaton, Belinda. "Lifestyle Sport Magazines and the Discourses of Sporting Masculinity." Sociological Review 51, no. 1_suppl (May 2003): 193–221. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-954x.2003.tb03612.x.

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Zvereva, E. A., and M. M. Gordeeva. "Modern Intellectual Magazines as Phenomenon of Culture and Civilization." Vestnik NSU. Series: History and Philology 18, no. 6 (2019): 115–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.25205/1818-7919-2019-18-6-115-128.

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The relevance of the research is connected with the leading directions of the development of modern journalistic science, which prioritizes studying the transformation of traditional media under the influence of the realities of the information society and modern civilization. The processes of penetration of the civilization factor into the media sphere are particularly clearly seen in the segment of magazine publications, which is connected with the globalization of the magazine market and the scale of its influence on the audience. Among the main vectors of modern magazine sactivities are the creation of cultural values and the creation of civilization values. If an intellectual magazine creates cultural values, broadcasting information at a qualitative level and focusing on a high level of audience training, the “new intellectual magazine” as an interdisciplinary publication creates the values of civilization and forms the lifestyle of the audience. The study of modern intellectual publications as translators of cultural values and values of civilization requires studying the modern intellectual magazine as a type of publication, identifying its main features, substantiating the differentiation of intellectual magazines into two subgroups – the classic intellectual magazine (for example, “Inviolable Reserve: Politics and Culture Debate”, “New Literary Review”) and a new intellectual magazine (for example, “Snob” and “Esquire”). The methodological basis of this work is based on a systems approach and a comparative typological method. In particular, the systems approach was used to identify evidence of an intellectual magazine as a type of publication. The comparative typological method was used to determine the differentiating measure of the subgroups of the intellectual magazine. The key factor in the emergence of a new intellectual magazine was the formation of a young generation of intellectuals with discrete, interactive thinking, a special value system. The magazines broadcast a model of modern civilization with its ideas and meanings, which proves the inclusion of this media phenomenon in civilizational communication processes.
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Kotsaga, Effrosyni. "Gendered Marketing of Food Supplements in Lifestyle Magazines in Greece." Current Nutraceuticals 1, no. 1 (April 29, 2020): 54–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/2665978601666191204164206.

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Background: Marketing of food supplements in Greece in print media has not been examined and this study is the first attempt to provide a comparative statistical analysis. Methods: Lifestyle magazines that were distributed all over Greece and aimed at women and men were collected in the years 2014 and 2016. Five criteria with their subcriteria were developed and were related to the branding of the food supplements; their quality characteristics; the information given about health concerns; photographs of people who promoted food supplements and to claims of their suitability. Results: It seems that in terms of product branding, women’s magazines were more likely to be targeted. Some quality characteristics such as information about the ingredients of food supplements or information about banned substances were more likely to be seen in women’s magazines in 2016. In 2014 and 2016, not all advertisements provided information about health concerns and among those which informed readers about health concerns, differentiation in target audiences was observed. Photographs that showed people promoting food supplements as well as claims of suitability for various categories of consumers, seem to be gendered in 2014 but this trend was not strong enough in 2016. Conclusion: It can be argued that the marketing of food supplements was aggressive and gendered in 2014 and changed in 2016 with better information on public health but had retained some gendered stereotypes.
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Meyer, Alicja. "Zachęcanie dzieci do aktywności fizycznej w czasopiśmie „Świerszczyk”." Pedagogika Przedszkolna i Wczesnoszkolna, no. 2 (18) (2021): 85–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/23537159ppw.21.020.15180.

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Encouraging children’s physical activity based on the “Świerszczyk” magazine Referring to the diversity of books and magazines, in terms of expanding reading among the youngest and shaping and shaping positive pro-health attitudes, it is worth paying attention to the role that literature plays in shaping these attitudes. Based on the magazine “Świerszczyk”, the author decided to present the motif of the movement that was captured in the magazine. On this basis, it was presented how to properly shape and expand children’s willingness to contact the book, as well as the importance of contact with the book for the child’s development. Through contact with literature, you can pass on knowledge to children in every possible field, as well as encourage physical activity. Children have a natural need to move, which should be supported, developed and stimulated by encouraging them to various forms and physical activities. In addition to translating and teaching correct lifestyle patterns. With the help of literature, stories and magazines, we can shape these attitudes in them, at the same time counteracting developmental abnormalities, chronic diseases, obesity and posture defects. An important factor in the proper development of a child is the awareness and willingness of parents to pass on the right models.
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Reichert, Tom, James E. Mueller, and Michael Nitz. "Disengaged and Uninformed: 2000 Presidential Election Coverage in Consumer Magazines Popular with Young Adults." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 80, no. 3 (September 2003): 513–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/107769900308000303.

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This study examines content and tone of political information in five leading general interest and lifestyle magazines from December 1999 through November 2000. The analysis revealed a low level of political information in the selected magazines. With the exception of Rolling Stone and Glamour, the nature of coverage was strategy oriented and superficial, while the tone was mostly cynical in men's magazines, yet favorable toward Gore. The results provide a glimpse of the political information available for typical young adults and insight into the apathetic attitudes of young adults toward the American political system.
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Selemeneva, O. A. "Intertextuality in Native Advertising of International Glossy Magazines (of Tatler Magazine)." Nauchnyi dialog 11, no. 2 (March 19, 2022): 239–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2022-11-2-239-256.

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The article is devoted to the problem of intertextuality in native commercial advertising as one of the most modern technologies for promoting goods and services on the market. The types of intertextual inclusions in the international glossy magazine Tatler” is systematized in the paper and their functional potential is described. The choice of the research source is due to the significant influence of transnational media on the process of homogenization of cultural pictures of the world of different ethnic groups and the prototypical nature of the journal as an encyclopedia of the lifestyle of a successful person. It is proved that the native advertising discourse of “Tatler” magazine is characterized by the presence of a complex system of verifiable intertextual units, including quotes from fashion designers, models, actors, etc., transformed and non-transformed text applications from different source areas, precedent names, hashtags with an allusive function. It is noted that the analyzed units are multifunctional and perform informative, attractive, expressive, suggestive, compositional-playing and other functions. The author comes to the conclusion that the whole system of intertextual inclusions of “Tatler” native advertising is aimed at creating and maintaining a myth about the existence of a special “Tatler man” in the visually aesthetic world of luxury, whose image becomes a tool for forming the social status identity of the addressee of the advertising message.
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Stevenson, Nick, Peter Jackson, and Kate Brooks. "Reading Men's Lifestyle Magazines: Cultural Power and the Information Society." Sociological Review 51, no. 1_suppl (May 2003): 112–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-954x.2003.tb03606.x.

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Chen, Ariel, and David Machin. "Changing Genres and Language Styles in Contemporary Chinese Lifestyle Magazines." Media International Australia 147, no. 1 (May 2013): 73–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x1314700109.

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The magazine market in China has been changing steadily as global media corporations have brought their international titles into China and as local Chinese titles have had to transform in order to meet the changing market and the arrival of advertising-driven content. This article analyses the changing visual styles, linguistic genres and language styles in the women's lifestyle magazine Rayli over the past ten years, showing how these increasingly seek to foster identities, ideas and values appropriate to a global culture ideology of consumerism.
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Ricciardelli, Rosemary, Kimberley A. Clow, and Philip White. "Investigating Hegemonic Masculinity: Portrayals of Masculinity in Men’s Lifestyle Magazines." Sex Roles 63, no. 1-2 (March 31, 2010): 64–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11199-010-9764-8.

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Mishra, Suman. "Globalizing male attractiveness: Advertising in men’s lifestyle magazines in India." International Communication Gazette 83, no. 3 (February 7, 2021): 280–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1748048521992498.

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This study examines the construction of new models of masculinity in men’s lifestyle magazine advertising in India. Using textual analysis of advertisements, the study shows how certain kinds of western masculine ideals and body aesthetics are being adopted and reworked into advertising to appeal and facilitate consumption among middle and upper-class Indian men living in the urban centers of India. The contemporary construction of upper and aspirational middle-class masculinity includes size and hypermuscularity, fair skin/whiteness, and a view of self as global ethnic. These types of constructions help to globalize the male body and masculine ideal while also privileging whiteness and class in the local and global arena.
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Yang, Yiyi, Lu Tang, and Bijie Bie. "Portrayals of Mental Illnesses in Women’s and Men’s Magazines in the United States." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 94, no. 3 (May 12, 2016): 793–811. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077699016644559.

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Mental illness is a serious health risk in the United States. People suffering from mental illnesses are often subjective to gender-specific stigma and stereotypes. Based on theories of agenda setting, framing, and stigma communication, this study compares the portrayal of mental illnesses in women’s and men’s lifestyle and health magazines between 2009 and 2013 through a content analysis. It finds that women’s magazines tend to present a more positive coverage of mental illnesses by citing patients, adopting human interest discourse, and using challenge cues such as hope than men’s magazines. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.
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Eras, Pien, Ana Paula Simões-Wüst, and Carel Thijs. "Influence of Alternative Lifestyles on Antibiotic Use during Pregnancy, Lactation and in Children." Antibiotics 10, no. 7 (July 9, 2021): 837. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10070837.

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Alternative lifestyles are likely to be associated with distinct usage of specific medicinal products. Our goal was to find out whether the intake of antibiotics during pregnancy and by children differs according to whether the mothers have alternative or conventional lifestyles. Therefore, we investigated the use of antibiotics by pregnant women and by children up to 11 years of age participating in the KOALA Birth Cohort Study. This cohort comprises two recruitment groups of mother–infant pairs, one with alternative lifestyles (selected via organic food shops, anthroposophic clinicians and midwives, anthroposophic under-five clinics, Rudolf Steiner schools and relevant magazines, n = 491) the other with conventional lifestyles (no selection based on lifestyle, n = 2343). Mothers in the alternative lifestyle group more frequently adhered to specific living rules and identified themselves with anthroposophy more than mothers in the conventional lifestyle group. The results revealed significant differences in antibiotic use during pregnancy and in children from 3 months to 10 years of age between the two groups. The rate of antibiotic use in children was consistently lower in the alternative lifestyle group than in the conventional lifestyle group. Antibiotic use in pregnancy was higher in low educated women, and maternal antibiotic use during lactation was higher after an instrumented delivery in hospital. Antibiotic use in the infant was higher when they had older sibs or were born in hospital, and lower in those who had been longer breastfed. After adjustment for these factors, the differences in antibiotic use between the alternative and conventional groups remained. The results suggest that an alternative lifestyle is associated with cautious antibiotic use during pregnancy, lactation and in children.
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Earl, Catherine. "Saigon Style: Middle-Class Culture and Transformations of Urban Lifestyling in Post-Reform Vietnamese Media." Media International Australia 147, no. 1 (May 2013): 85–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x1314700110.

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Twenty-first-century Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon) is the centre of style for a growing urban middle class in post-reform Vietnam. Over the past generation, since macro-economic reform (đổi mới), and with increased opportunities for business, education and travel, urbanites have been able to climb the social ladder and wield new forms of social power stemming from emerging lifestyle and consumption practices. Middle-class lifestyles have become the most desired models for living, providing an opportunity for the government to rely on the urban lifestyle media to convey its point of view to a receptive public. Engaging with Vietnam's urban lifestyle media, this article argues that the impact of reform in Vietnam has been overstated. Popular women's magazines reveal that continuities remain in the mode and content of the delivery of the state's values in the socialist past and the market-oriented present, even with the evolution of a modern mass media system.
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Atyaksheva, D. A. "Features of the speech influence in advertising of the lifestyle magazines." Rossiiskii Gumanitarnyi Zhurnal 8, no. 3 (2019): 221. http://dx.doi.org/10.15643/libartrus-2019.3.6.

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Song, Geng, and Tracy K. Lee. "CONSUMPTION, CLASS FORMATION AND SEXUALITY: READING MEN'S LIFESTYLE MAGAZINES IN CHINA." China Journal 64 (July 2010): 159–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/tcj.64.20749251.

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Saladin, Ronald. "Betweengyaru-oandsōshokukei danshi:body discourses in lifestyle magazines for young Japanese men." Contemporary Japan 27, no. 1 (March 2015): 53–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/cj-2015-0004.

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36

Hollow, Matthew. "Perfect lives: Lifestyle magazines and utopian impulses in contemporary British society." International Journal of Cultural Studies 15, no. 1 (July 21, 2011): 17–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1367877911411792.

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37

Sayan-Cengiz, Feyda. "Eroding the symbolic significance of veiling? The Islamic fashion magazineÂlâ, consumerism, and the challenged boundaries of the “Islamic neighborhood”." New Perspectives on Turkey 58 (May 2018): 155–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/npt.2018.9.

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AbstractIslamic fashion and lifestyle magazines enable the global circulation and consumption of newly emerging images of, narratives about, and discourses on Muslim women across the globe. Such magazines also trigger debates by making visible the language of commodification and consumerism that is increasingly shaping Muslim subjectivities. In particular,Âlâ—the pioneering Islamic fashion magazine in Turkey—has been the target of extensive criticism by Islamic intellectuals and columnists. This study contextualizes these criticisms within the broader debate on veiling fashion and Islamic consumerism in the context of 2010s Turkey, a context in which the Islamic bourgeoisie has been strengthened and class cleavages among veiled women have been further sharpened. The study analyzes the opinion columns focusing onÂlâpublished in the Islamic, pro-government newspaperYeni Şafak, as well as the responses ofÂlâ’s editors and producers to such criticisms. The findings demonstrate that the magazine is criticized for making visible the surge of consumerism among the Islamic bourgeoisie, for blurring the boundaries between Islamic and secular identities, and for fragmenting an idealized imagination of Islamic collectivity by emphasizing class cleavages among veiled women. I argue that these criticisms ofÂlâin Islamic circles reflect a concern with the erosion of the symbolic connotations of veiling in Turkey, particularly in terms of marking the boundaries that define the imagination of an Islamic collectivity.
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Waling, Andrea. "“We Are So Pumped Full of Shit by the Media”." Men and Masculinities 20, no. 4 (June 5, 2016): 427–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1097184x16652654.

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Men’s lifestyle magazines have long since been the focus of theorists in their examination of masculinity. However, research concerning men’s responses to such content, and whether these representations speak to their perceptions on embodying particular forms of masculinity in an Australian context, is largely absent. To understand how Australian men conceptualize their own ideas about masculinity and identity, interviews were conducted with twenty Australian men who were asked to peruse copies of men’s lifestyle magazines while pondering what it means to be masculine. Engaging with the theoretical frameworks of representational masculinity and masculine reformulation patterns, the results of this study found that the men interviewed identified four themes of social pressure perpetuated by these magazines regarding their own formation of a masculine identity. These include media representation and cultural consumption pressures, body image and muscularity pressures, performative sex and desirability expectations, and the fear of social judgment from both those who expect, and those who reject, particular performances of masculinity. Despite these articulations, however, the men maintained that these expectations affect other men and not themselves. While these men did not identify with these pressures, a textual analysis of their responses suggest otherwise, indicating a paradox in which they both accept and reject the mythscapes of aspirational masculinity presented before them.
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Machin, David, and Joanna Thornborrow. "Lifestyle and the Depoliticisation of Agency: Sex as Power in Women's Magazines." Social Semiotics 16, no. 1 (April 2006): 173–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10350330500487968.

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Franzia, Elda. "TINJAUAN TIPOGRAFIS PADA SAMPUL MUKA MAJALAH FEMINA." Jurnal Dimensi Seni Rupa dan Desain 8, no. 2 (September 1, 2011): 45–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.25105/dim.v8i2.989.

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Abstract The Typographic Review of Femina Magazine's COver. The changing forms of communication brough us to the developing of printed mass media nowdays. For magazine typography is one of the important visual elemnt in cover, besidea other visual elements such as image, colour and lay out. Not just in convey verbal and visual information to the magazine's readers through massages and idea, but also through conotative meanings Femina magazines has been developing it,s face since first time published until now, including typographic developmnet of it's cover. This typography review of Femina magazine's cover will takes about typeface that used as the identity of Femina and the typeface development in coverline, which are using and the hierarchy in coverline, and also the using of color which affects conotative meaning of cover as a whole. In the end, choosing and the using of typeface on magazine's cover connect to the lifestyle of the readers Abstrak Tinjauan Tipografis pada Sampul Majalah Femina, Perubahan bentuk komunikasi dari lisan menjadi tulisan menghantarkan kita pada perkembangan media massa cetak masa kini. Pada majalah, tipografi merupakan elemen visual penting yang terdapat pada sampul muka, di samping elemn viual lainnya seperti image, warna dan tata letaknya. Melalui tipografi, informasi verbal dan visual disampaikan kepada pembaca majalah tersebut memalui pesan dan gagasan yang dibawanya serta kesan atau citra secara visual yang disampaikan olehnya. Majalah Femina telah mengalami perkembangan dalam perwajahannya sejak awal terbutnya sampai sekarang. termask perkembangan tipografi pada sampul mukanya. Tinjauan tipografis pada sampul muka majalah Femina ini akan membahas mengenai jenis huruf yang digunakan sebagai identitas Femina dan perkembangan jenis huruf yang digunakan sebagai coverline, yaitu penggunaan dan hierarki coverline serta penggunaan warna yang mempengaruhi citra visual dari tampilan keseluruhan. Pemilihan dan penggunaan jenis huruf pada sampul majalah pada akhirnya terkait erat dengan gaya hidup masa kini pembacanya
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Calder, Bill. "Gay Lifestyle Publications: Drawing the Crowds to Grow the Bar Scene." Media International Australia 156, no. 1 (August 2015): 39–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x1515600106.

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This article argues that the rapid expansion of Australia's gay bar scene from the late 1970s was aided by the parallel development of a new media genre: the gay lifestyle publication. The reason for this was a powerful synergy that existed between the publicity needs of the bar scene and the editorial, distribution and revenue needs of the lifestyle magazines. Conversely, the lack of such a synergy between the internet and the bars today can be seen as contributing to the recent decline of gay bars in Australian cities.
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Benwell, Bethan. "Male Gossip and Language Play in the Letters Pages of Men's Lifestyle Magazines." Journal of Popular Culture 34, no. 4 (March 2001): 19–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.0022-3840.2001.3404_19.x.

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Siudikienė, Daiva, and Lijana Stundžė. "For Peculiarities of Representation of Women's Roles and Their Changes in Women's Magazines: Case of the Magazine Moteris." Informacijos mokslai 92 (July 2, 2021): 65–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.15388/im.2021.92.52.

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For a long time, the patriarchal tradition of portraying a woman as stereotypical has been established, confining her to traditional roles in the family and society. Media publications often become the main source of constructing attitudes and beliefs in society. The peculiarities of portraying women in the media are an important means of constructing women's self-awareness. The purpose of this article – to introduce the research conducted to investigate the peculiarities of representation of the women‘s roles in the women's magazines and their transformation. For implementation this research it has been chosen the largest monthly magazine for the Lithuanian women „Woman“ and the issues have been chosen published in 1990, 2000, 2010 and 2018 to fulfill the qualitative and quantitative content analysis. The transition from the Soviet system to the capitalist society is characterized by transformation of values, the search for national identity, the establishmen the new models of relations in the society, the establishmen to the lifestyle characteristic to the capitalist society, etc. The images presented in the media draw the attention of individuals and shape the public's perception of what a woman should be and what responsibilities are assigned to her.
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G. Mbure, Wanjiru, and Jennifer Stevens Aubrey. "A Transnational Analysis of Skin Tone Ideals in Cosmetic Advertisements in Women's Lifestyle Magazines." Howard Journal of Communications 28, no. 4 (April 12, 2017): 339–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10646175.2017.1300964.

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Zestanakis, Panagiotis. "Gender and sexuality in three late-1980s Greek lifestyle magazines: Playboy, Status and Click." Journal of Greek Media & Culture 3, no. 1 (April 1, 2017): 95–115. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/jgmc.3.1.95_1.

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Lee, Tracy K., and Geng Song. "Masculinity and aspiring consumption: A reception study of men’s lifestyle magazines in contemporary China." East Asian Journal of Popular Culture 3, no. 1 (April 1, 2017): 39–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/eapc.3.1.39_1.

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Mishra, Suman. "Assimilatory hybrid masculinity in Indian editions of global men’s lifestyle magazines: the production process." Journal of Media Business Studies 15, no. 2 (April 3, 2018): 147–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16522354.2018.1482040.

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Prianti, Desi Dwi. "Towards the westernized body: a popular narrative reinforced by men's lifestyle magazines in Indonesia." Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 19, no. 1 (January 2, 2018): 103–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14649373.2018.1422351.

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Tyler, Melissa. "Managing between the Sheets: Lifestyle Magazines and the Management of Sexuality in Everyday Life." Sexualities 7, no. 1 (February 2004): 81–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1363460704040144.

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50

Molodychenko, Evgeni Nikolaevich. "Metasemiotic Projects and Lifestyle Media: Formulating Commodities as Resources for Identity Enactment." Russian Journal of Linguistics 24, no. 1 (December 15, 2020): 117–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.22363/2687-0088-2020-24-1-117-136.

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There has recently been a notable increase in the amount and perceived significance of new lifestyle media. Besides the instructive and entertaining function, these media arguably play a more fundamental sociocultural role of constructing identities. In consumer societies, these identities are to a great extent enacted through the acquisition of commodities and engagement in commodified practices, which thereby become semiotic resources of identity stylization. The purpose of this article is to explore the discursive mechanisms underpinning the process of formulating commodities and practices as such semiotic resources. To this end, several discourses from new online men’s magazines have been analyzed drawing on a model of discourse analysis that sees discourse as one of the “moments” of the social practice it is embedded in. The results indicate that the mechanism behind the processes in question can be described as a metasemiotic project. As such a project unfolds in discourse, various commodities and practices are being typified by a metasemiotic term. One of the most frequent prototypical metasemiotic terms in these resources is stylish man . The term is instantiated in texts by several lexemes, including the lexeme style and its derivatives, as well as lexemes naming various “masculine personas” such as man , guy, kid, gentleman, bad ass. It has been shown that an increasing number of commodities and practices are being “theorized” by the discourse of new online men’s magazines and typified by this term. One important feature behind the workings of the metasemiotic project is intertextuality. Specific texts are always dialogically linked to other texts of lifestyle discourse, while object-signs are reformulated and imbued with different social values. These results contribute to the exploration of contemporary lifestyle media and discursive mechanisms of identity construction used by them, and, in a more general sense, to recent discussions of operationalizing wider sociocultural context in textually oriented discourse analysis.
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