2010
DOI: 10.1177/000494411005400103
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Hard Lines and Soft Scenes: Constituting Masculinities in the Prospectuses of all-Boys Elite Private Schools

Abstract: Over the last decade, education researchers have been concerned with the ‘impression management’ activities of schools in the current climate of school corporatisation. Among these activities is the dissemination of school prospectuses that, far from being merely arbitrary sources of information, are seen as strategic texts that communicate the ethos of educational providers to potential clientele. Through sociocultural, feminist and post-structuralist frames, we consider how the positioning of masculinities i… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…As McDonald et al (2010) have argued, 'schools draw on hegemonic discourses in broader cultural politics [and]…in turn, reproduce and reinforce the platforms and emphases of these discourses' (p.14). Websites and prospectuses are perhaps particularly important for private schools as they often rely on visual and ritual display as a base for their prestige and exclusivity (e.g., emphasising school architecture and landscapes) (Allan, 2010;Gottschall et al, 2010).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As McDonald et al (2010) have argued, 'schools draw on hegemonic discourses in broader cultural politics [and]…in turn, reproduce and reinforce the platforms and emphases of these discourses' (p.14). Websites and prospectuses are perhaps particularly important for private schools as they often rely on visual and ritual display as a base for their prestige and exclusivity (e.g., emphasising school architecture and landscapes) (Allan, 2010;Gottschall et al, 2010).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast to the elite boys' school prospectuses, where the focus is on hard male bodies caught in action (Gottschall et al, 2010), the girls' prospectuses focus instead on pretty, passive, smiling girls posing for the camera. In these images and the texts that accompany them, femininity is constructed as a wistfully anticipating, loving/lovely/lovable, and simultaneously pure and heterosexually attractive state of being.…”
Section: Starry Eyes and Shiny Haloes: The Pure/ly Romanticised Girlmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…So while the promotional materials of elite private boys schools construct community and society in terms of providing opportunities for boys to lead (Gottschall et al, 2010); on the other hand, it seems that '[t]he significance and purpose of cultivating leadership among young women is linked to their capacity to be good citizens' (Harris, 2004, p. 79).Thus, elite private girls schools encourage girls to serve the community through 'active social service' (Charles, 2008, p. 8), 'good deeds' and being 'ambassadresses' for global society (Harris, 2004, p. 79, in Charles, 2008, as well as 'forging harmonious intercultural connections' (Harris, 2004, p. 71, in Charles, 2008. Such positions reinforce gender stereotypes-particularly the feminisation of service or labour (Burman, 2005, p. 362;Gonick, 2006, p. 5)-and the restrictions associated with them.…”
Section: Service With a Smile: Teamwork Community And 'Giving Back'mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite the plethora of studies of the ways schooling and education are produced in the media, advertising -including television advertisinghas been significantly underexamined. Where discourses of schooling and education on advertising have been examined, studies have primarily focused upon university advertisements (Farber & Holm, 2005), government public awareness campaigns (S. and private school prospectuses (Gottschall, Wardman, Edgeworth, Hutchesson, & Saltmarsh, 2010;Symes, 1998;Wardman et al, 2010). From this literature, it can be seen that advertisements directly selling the educational experience frame schooling in an overtly positive light.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%