
2010
Identity and performance in popular culture
Arguing that advertising not only sells things, but also ideas about the world, media scholar Sut Jhally offers a blistering analysis of commercial culture's inability to let go of reactionary gender representations. Jhally's starting point is the breakthrough work of the late sociologist Erving Goffman, whose 1959 book The Presentation of the Self in Everyday Life prefigured the growing field of performance studies. Jhally applies Goffman's analysis of the body in print advertising to hundreds of print ads today, uncovering an astonishing pattern of regressive and destructive gender codes. By looking beyond advertising as a medium that simply sells products, and beyond analyses of gender that tend to focus on either biology or objectification, The Codes of Gender offers important insights into the social construction of masculinity and femininity, the relationship between gender and power, and the everyday performance of cultural norms.

Sut Jhally
Himself

Helvetica

Le clan des cachalots

This Is It

Mabel

Halftime

Two Spirits

You Will Be a Man

Pitch People

Butch Jamie

Gender Revolution: A Journey with Katie Couric

Afternoons of Solitude

Behind the Doors of Umberto Eco

Battlefield Gender

Le Nom de la Rose : Le Documentaire

Universam Grochów

Girl Groups: The Story of a Sound

Cosplayers UK: The Movie

Legends of the Knight

Kate Bornstein Is a Queer & Pleasant Danger

In Search of Wabi Sabi with Marcel Theroux