Research Article
2012

‘Brown Sugar’

Publication: Gender and Language
Volume 6, Number 1

Abstract

Advertisements are a key site for gender and language study, many ads constructing relationships between femininity and consumption, and gender relations of a (hetero) sexual nature. In this paper I look in a qualitative way at how two ads in the form of ‘tiny texts’ indirectly index gender inflected with both ethnicity and sexuality. Printed on sugar tubes found in a café in modern urban Botswana, one of these ads shows a black woman, the other a white woman. I adopt a feminist discourse analytic approach to argue that the many lexical and other intertextual associations of ‘sugar’ and ‘sweetness’ in relation to women and sex function to sexualise the black woman (in particular), and that these in turn intertextually sexualise the white woman in ways which index women’s ‘availability’ within an overall discourse of multiculturalism and social liberalisation.

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Published In

Go to Gender and Language
Gender and Language
Volume 6Number 12012
Pages: 105 - 129

History

Published in print: 2012
Published online: 4 November 2024

Keyword

  1. book review

Authors

Affiliations

Jane Sunderland [email protected]
Author
Biography: Jane Sunderland is a Senior Lecturer at Lancaster University, where she teaches Gender and Language and is Director of Studies of the PhD in Applied Linguistics by Thesis and Coursework programme. An ex-President of IGALA, her research interests are gender and discourse, Harry Potter and boys’ literacies, young children’s fiction, multimodality in relation to gender, and, rather differently, stage adaptations of novels.

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Jane Sunderland
Gender and Language 2012 6:1, 105-129

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