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Articles

Pills, Periods, and Postfeminism

The new politics of marketing birth control

Pages 490-504 | Published online: 16 Aug 2012
 

Abstract

Since the English translation of Elsimar Coutinho's Is Menstruation Obsolete? in 1999 and the introduction of cycle-stopping birth control pills in 2003, US women are increasingly advised that menstruation is not necessary for good health. The most widely distributed source of such messages is direct-to-consumer advertisements for birth control pills. The most recent television ads for Seasonique, the leading brand of cycle-stopping contraceptive in the US, minimize the pill's contraceptive function and focus instead on their effectiveness in reducing the frequency of menstruation. A close reading of these commercials reveals them to be an integral part of an emerging postfeminist media culture that attempts to solidify a new, neoliberal subjectivity for women. This subjectivity imposes an idealized, docile, non-menstruating feminine body, ready for full-time participation in the neoliberal economy.

Notes

1. At the time of writing, this commercial can be viewed on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v = 6xsnKcNgZW8.

2. At the time of writing, this commercial can be viewed on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v = YC_glEb4X5U.

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