Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Myra Marx Ferree , James A. Brown
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) University of Wisconsin-Madison
ANO 2005
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Gender and Society
ISSN 0891-2432
E-ISSN 1552-3977
EDITORA Annual Reviews (United States)
DOI 10.1177/0891243204271222
CITAÇÕES 10
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 9cf20e6127191dccff05850e5ee63c71

Resumo

Faced with declining fertility rates, media in Britain are reacting with anxiety about cultural annihilation. To look at how nationalism inflects concerns over biological and cultural reproduction, the authors analyze coverage of falling fertility and rising immigration in Great Britain in major newspapers in 2000-2. They find pronatalist appeals to be commonand especially directed at women but varying in how women's duty to the nation is framed. Appeals characterized as begging, lecturing, threatening, and bribing express different relationships between individual interest and the national good and offer positive and negative views of women. The political leanings of specific newspapers affect how they connect biological reproduction to the cultural threat seen in immigration. Even positive views of women as making rational reproductive choices are tainted by alarmist views of immigration as a threat to national survival.

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