Gender equality as psychological capital: the case of the UK Body Confidence Campaign

Author (Person)
Publisher
Series Title
Series Details Volume 2, Number 2, Pages 381-397
Publication Date September 2019
ISSN 2515 1096
Content Type

Abstract :

This article argues that gender-equality policy may function to cultivate women’s ‘psychological capital’, that is, psychological traits that assist women in becoming better workers and therefore further the interests of capital. It assesses documents produced by the UK government’s Body Confidence Campaign. First, the article finds that the campaign promoted narrow and corporate ideas about gender equality, only treating women’s aspiration as valuable if it led them to pursue profitable and traditionally ‘male’ professions. Second, it finds that despite campaign leaders’ criticisms of initiatives that blame women for their own low self-esteem, in practice, the campaign ended up doing exactly this by portraying low confidence as a drain on society and instructing women and girls to ‘build resilience’. Finally, the article finds that the campaign allowed companies to receive credit for limited and temporary efforts to appear ‘woman-friendly’ without overhauling their harmful marketing strategies in the long term.

Source Link Link to Main Source https://doi.org/10.1332/251510819X15567210731802
Alternative sources
  • https://researchportal.bath.ac.uk/en/publications/gender-equality-as-psychological-capital-the-case-of-the-uk-body-
Subject Categories
Subject Tags ,
Countries / Regions