ABSTRACT
#StrongIsTheNewSkinny has become a bodily mantra found across social media, and it is a postfeminist beauty myth. But given postfeminist contradictions, this presents a terrain in which only certain women are even allowed to attempt to achieve the unobtainable body. This is compounded by race and cisgenderism. To unpack this tenuous relationship, this work uses critical discourse analysis to examine image macros associated with the hashtag. The key themes that emerged were two-fold: First, #StrongIsTheNewSkinny does not actually seek visible strength, and it functions as rhetorical strength—it calls for strength but does not actually seek it in response. In this way, #StrongIsTheNewSkinny repackages old body stereotypes in a way befitting the era of postfeminist confidence. Two, this further marginalizes women of color, as a discourse purporting to reject the ultrathin continues to reinforce a particular type of White, thin, cisgendered female body. The analysis of this hashtagged beauty myth fits into a trend of only rhetorically posing cultural issues—diversity may be called for, but it is not actively sought in response. This is worth noting as feminism turns to the fourth wave and emphasizes hashtags—hashtags can turn and remain rhetorical if not critically probed.
Acknowledgments
The author would like to thank Peggy Kreshel and Samantha Meyer for their feedback in the preparation of this manuscript.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Jessica Maddox
Jessica Maddox is an assistant professor in the Department of Journalism and Creative Media at the University of Alabama. Her research focuses on the intersections of popular culture, visual culture, and digital culture. She tweets at @ProfJessMaddox. E-mail: [email protected]