‘Men don't do Botox, they do Brotox’ – Emerging Configurations of Masculinity in the Marketing of Cosmetic Treatments Online

IF 0.8 Q3 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY Somatechnics Pub Date : 2021-04-01 DOI:10.3366/SOMA.2021.0338
Signe Rom Rasmussen
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Non-invasive cosmetic treatments are increasingly popular, and the cosmetic skincare industry is currently experiencing growth at a global scale. Men are reported to constitute a growing consumer segment of this emerging market and accordingly, men are being targeted in the marketing of cosmetic skincare clinics (International Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery 2018). On clinic websites, content is emerging as “especially for men”. This feeds into the contemporary phenomena that men's bodies are increasingly visible through a range of lifestyle industries such as fashion, fitness, tattooing, and grooming ( Bordo 1999 , Gill et al. 2005 , Hakim 2019 ). Men have, in Western culture, traditionally been expected to take on a ‘functional, aloof and distanced’ relationship to their bodies ( Coffey 2016 ). In this article, I explore how masculinity and embodiment are negotiated in the online marketing of men's cosmetic treatments, as the male body is increasingly imagined as susceptible to cosmetic enhancement. Inspired by the somatechnical framework, I analyse the website marketing of three leading Danish cosmetic skincare clinics: Aglaia-klinikken, N'age, and DermoCosmetic. I argue that masculinity here is negotiated and produced as ambiguous, configuring between emergent and hegemonic forms ( Inhorn and Wentzell 2011 ). I draw on relevant theories of masculinity, to show how masculinity is produced as both effeminophobic and hegemonic, as well as inclusive and neoliberal ( Sedgwick 1991 , Connell 1995 , Anderson 2009 , Hakim 2019 ). I continue to argue that masculinity emerges around three prevalent connection points in the marketing: anger, career and the masculine face. I discuss the generative and disciplining trajectories of these configurations and the possibilities of (un)becoming they entail for men, as they continue to engage with these emerging medical technologies of appearance enhancement.
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“男人不打肉毒杆菌,他们打肉毒杆菌”——在线美容治疗营销中出现的男子气概配置
非侵入性美容治疗越来越受欢迎,美容护肤行业目前正在全球范围内增长。据报道,男性在这个新兴市场中构成了一个不断增长的消费群体,因此,男性成为美容护肤诊所营销的目标(国际美容整形外科学会,2018)。在诊所网站上,内容正在以“特别适合男性”的形式出现。这助长了当代现象,即男性的身体在时尚、健身、纹身和美容等一系列生活方式行业中越来越明显(Bordo 1999,Gill等人2005,Hakim 2019)。在西方文化中,男性传统上被期望与自己的身体保持“功能性、冷漠和疏远”的关系(Coffey 2016)。在这篇文章中,我探讨了在男性美容治疗的在线营销中,男性气质和化身是如何协商的,因为人们越来越认为男性身体容易受到美容效果的影响。受躯体技术框架的启发,我分析了丹麦三家领先的化妆品护肤诊所的网站营销:Aglaia klinikken、N'age和DermoCosmetic。我认为,这里的男子气概是作为模糊的,在新兴形式和霸权形式之间进行配置而协商和产生的(Inhorn和Wentzell,2011年)。我借鉴了男性气质的相关理论,展示了男性气质是如何产生的,既有女性恐惧症和霸权,也有包容性和新自由主义(Sedgwick 1991,Connell 1995,Anderson 2009,Hakim 2019)。我继续认为,男性气质是围绕着营销中三个普遍存在的联系点出现的:愤怒、职业和男性面孔。我讨论了这些配置的生成和训练轨迹,以及当男性继续参与这些新兴的美容医疗技术时,他们需要(不)成为这些配置的可能性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Somatechnics
Somatechnics SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
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