Literature DB >> 8868552

Recruiting women smokers: the engineering of consent.

A M Brandt1.   

Abstract

A range of social forces contributed to the effective recruitment of women to cigarette smoking in the crucial period between 1900 and 1940. Cigarette advertisers and public relations experts recognized the significance of women's changing roles and the rising culture of consumption, and worked to create specific meanings for the cigarette to make it appeal to women. The cigarette was a flexible symbol, with a remarkably elastic set of meanings; for women, it represented rebellious independence, glamour, seduction, and sexual allure, and served as a symbol for both feminists and flappers. The industry, with the help of advertisers and public relations experts, effectively engineered consent for women as smokers. The "engineering of consent" has a role to play in smoking cessation, since negative meanings for the cigarette can be engineered as well.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8868552

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Med Womens Assoc (1972)        ISSN: 0098-8421


  8 in total

1.  From social taboo to "torch of freedom": the marketing of cigarettes to women.

Authors:  A Amos; M Haglund
Journal:  Tob Control       Date:  2000-03       Impact factor: 7.552

2.  COVID-19 and the gendered markets of people and products: explaining inequalities in infections and deaths.

Authors:  Sarah Hawkes; Kent Buse
Journal:  Rev Can Etudes Dev       Date:  2020-10-23

3.  Chapter 1:The impact of the reduction in tobacco smoking on U.S. lung cancer mortality, 1975-2000: an introduction to the problem.

Authors:  Eric J Feuer; David T Levy; William J McCarthy
Journal:  Risk Anal       Date:  2012-07       Impact factor: 4.000

4.  Tobacco use and secondhand smoke exposure during pregnancy: an investigative survey of women in 9 developing nations.

Authors:  Michele Bloch; Fernando Althabe; Marie Onyamboko; Christine Kaseba-Sata; Eduardo E Castilla; Salvio Freire; Ana L Garces; Sailajanandan Parida; Shivaprasad S Goudar; Muhammad Masood Kadir; Norman Goco; Jutta Thornberry; Magdalena Daniels; Janet Bartz; Tyler Hartwell; Nancy Moss; Robert Goldenberg
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2008-02-28       Impact factor: 9.308

5.  Do socio-economic gradients in smoking emerge differently across time by gender? Implications for the tobacco epidemic from a pregnancy cohort in California, USA.

Authors:  Katherine M Keyes; Dana March; Bruce G Link; Howard D Chilcoat; Ezra Susser
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2012-11-08       Impact factor: 4.634

6.  The meanings of smoking to women and their implications for cessation.

Authors:  Lorraine Greaves
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2015-01-27       Impact factor: 3.390

Review 7.  'As Long as It Comes off as a Cigarette Ad, Not a Civil Rights Message': Gender, Inequality and the Commercial Determinants of Health.

Authors:  Sarah E Hill; Sharon Friel
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2020-10-29       Impact factor: 3.390

8.  An Analysis of Electronic Cigarette and Cigarette Advertising in US Women's Magazines.

Authors:  Corey Hannah Basch; Jennifer Mongiovi; Grace Clarke Hillyer; Danna Ethan; Rodney Hammond
Journal:  Int J Prev Med       Date:  2016-09-08
  8 in total

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