2020
DOI: 10.1558/genl.36302
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‘Should Latinas go blond?’ Media representation and the regulation of Latina bodies and Latinas’ social and cultural practices in a beauty magazine

Abstract: In the United States, ‘Latinas’ is an ethnic category that includes a very diverse population. Since second- and third-generation Latinxs tend to be Englishdominant speakers, it is common to see publications in English that target this group. This study analyses how one of these publications, a beauty magazine for Latinas, uses different linguistic devices in their interviews and beauty advice columns to create a racially/ethnically homogeneous image of this community. My analysis focuses on this publication’s… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…This is aligned with the literature highlighting the ways cisgender and trans Latina women experience pressure to manifest particular standards of beauty. For instance, a recent study by Rojas-Sosa [ 55 ] found that a popular beauty magazine targeting Latina women encourages celebration of performances of beauty aligned with white women while regulating aspects that appear “too Latina” in order to regulate and exploit otherness in acceptable ways [ 55 ] (p. 55). We see this through examples like hypersexualization in clothing, always taking care to apply make-up and style one’s hair, and taking pride in wearing often painful articles of clothing to always appear in public in certain ways [ 55 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This is aligned with the literature highlighting the ways cisgender and trans Latina women experience pressure to manifest particular standards of beauty. For instance, a recent study by Rojas-Sosa [ 55 ] found that a popular beauty magazine targeting Latina women encourages celebration of performances of beauty aligned with white women while regulating aspects that appear “too Latina” in order to regulate and exploit otherness in acceptable ways [ 55 ] (p. 55). We see this through examples like hypersexualization in clothing, always taking care to apply make-up and style one’s hair, and taking pride in wearing often painful articles of clothing to always appear in public in certain ways [ 55 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, a recent study by Rojas-Sosa [ 55 ] found that a popular beauty magazine targeting Latina women encourages celebration of performances of beauty aligned with white women while regulating aspects that appear “too Latina” in order to regulate and exploit otherness in acceptable ways [ 55 ] (p. 55). We see this through examples like hypersexualization in clothing, always taking care to apply make-up and style one’s hair, and taking pride in wearing often painful articles of clothing to always appear in public in certain ways [ 55 ]. Thus, the women whose posts fit under this theme appear to be striving to create an appearance aligned with mainstream expectations of Latina femininity [ 56 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%