Melancholic communities: trauma, neoliberalism and the rise of Chat magazine

IF 0.2 Q4 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Journal of Psychosocial Studies Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1332/147867321x16401162893334
Lucinda Rose Stroud
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Abstract

Weekly real-life magazines (RLMs) for women form a genre that has experienced sustained popularity for more than three decades and are constructed from claims to represent their readerships’ lives. Strikingly, during the COVID-19 pandemic where other magazines have witnessed a decline in sales and many closures, real-life titles have experienced continuous success. This article reads RLMs through a psychosocial lens as a symptom of an emerging social melancholia that began to form from the late 1970s in the United Kingdom. Through an analysis of Chat magazine, the article illustrates how the genre was constructed and argues that it resonates with a form of melancholia that has led to the creation of communities bonded through shared collective experiences that have found the semblance of resolution within this genre’s creation.
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忧郁的社区:创伤、新自由主义和《聊天》杂志的兴起
女性生活周刊(RLMs)是一种持续流行了30多年的杂志类型,其宗旨是代表读者的生活。引人注目的是,在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,其他杂志的销量下降,许多杂志倒闭,而现实生活中的标题却持续取得成功。本文从社会心理的角度来解读rlm,认为它是20世纪70年代末在英国形成的一种新兴的社会忧郁症的症状。通过对《聊天》杂志的分析,本文阐述了这一类型是如何构建的,并认为它与一种忧郁症产生了共鸣,这种忧郁症通过共享的集体经历导致了社区的建立,这种经历在这一类型的创作中找到了解决方案的表面。
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