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Capitalizing on Affect: Viagra (in)Action

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Recent cultural criticisms of Viagra’s advertisements and promotional materials have argued that rhetorical constructions of Viagra users reestablish a hegemonic masculinity premised on heterosexual standards of traditional gender norms (Baglia, 2005; Bordo, 2000; Loe, 2004). Cultural critics have also noted that Viagra’s promotional materials allow “for alternative readings by potential users who do not fall into the category of the ‘traditional/ideal’ Viagra user” including women and homosexual men (Mamo & Fishman, 2001, p. 14). What most criticisms fail to take into account is that Viagra, like other lifestyle drugs, does not only reestablish cultural constructs of the contemporary gendered body and its subversions, but that Viagra’s advertisements also provide a rhetorical site in which to investigate the cultural body’s relationship to contemporary capitalism.

    Original languageAmerican English
    JournalScholarship and Professional Work - Communication
    Volume1
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Jan 1 2008

    Keywords

    • adverstising
    • critial studies in communication
    • rhetorical studies
    • viagra

    Disciplines

    • Communication
    • Critical and Cultural Studies
    • Gender, Race, Sexuality, and Ethnicity in Communication
    • Health Communication
    • Speech and Rhetorical Studies

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