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Les magazines comme une source de la promotion pour la consommation pour la santé : une comparaison entre « Women’s Health » et « Men’s Health

Year 2018, Issue: 28, 239 - 255, 28.06.2018
https://doi.org/10.16878/gsuilet.436047

Abstract

Dans le monde d’aujourd’hui où la vie saine a une grande importance, la santé est un sujet populaire et devient aussi un domaine important pour les médias. A travers les médias, le public est exposé à de nombreux conseils et recommandations liés à la santé et cela conduit les individus à consommer plus afin d’être en bonne santé. D’autre part, on suppose que parmi les médias de masse, les magazines sont ceux qui pousse plus les gens à consommer. Cette étude vise à analyser les magazines de santé « Women’s Health» et «Men›s Health» qui ont le taux de circulation le plus élevé en 2016 en termes de diriger leurs lecteurs à consommer pour leur santé. Les résultats ont montré que la majorité des articles publiés étaient intitulés « Women›s Health ». Nous avons constaté que ce magazine dirige le lecteur est vers la consommation dans chaque article en mentionnant un nom de spécialiste / médecin ou de l’hôpital.

References

  • Aubrey J.S. (2010). Looking Good Versus Feeling Good: An Investigation of Media Frames of Health Advice and Their Effects on Women’s Body-Related Self-perceptions. Sex Roles, 63 (1-2): 50-63.
  • Atar, M.G. (2016). Gıda Reklamlarının İddia Ettikleri: Dergi Reklamları Üzerine Bir İnceleme.
  • Baudrillard, J. (1998). The Consumer Society: Myths and Structures. London: Sage.
  • Bazzini, D. G., Pepper, A., Swofford, R. and Cochran, K. (2015). How healthy are health magazines? A comparative content analysis of cover captions and images of women’s and men’s health magazine. Sex Roles, 72 (5-6): 198-210.
  • Bocock, R. (1993). Consumption. London: Routledge.
  • Brunner, B.R. and Huber, L.R.B. (2010). 101 ways to improve health reporting: A comparison of the types and quality of health information in men’s and women’s magazines. Public Relations Review, 36 (1): 84-86.
  • Bunton, R. and Crawshaw, P. (2004). Consuming men’s health: Risk, ritual and ambivalence in men’s lifestyle magazines. S. Henderson and A. Petersen, (Eds.), In Consuming Health The Commodification of Health Care (187-203). London: Routledge.
  • Burrows, R., Nettleton, S. and Bunton, R. (2005). Sociology and health promotion: Health, risk and consumption under late modernism. R. Bunton; S. Nettleton and R. Burrows (Eds.), In The Sociology of Health Promotion: Critical Analyses of Consumption Lifestyle and Risk (1-8). London: Routledge.
  • Cereyan Medya (Mart 2016). Aylık Voltaj. Retrieved 15.09.2017 from www. cereyan.com.tr/assets/pdf/1463589574.pdf
  • Christopherson, N., Janning, M. and McConnell, E.D. (2002). Two Kicks Forward, One Kick Back: A Content Analysis of Media Discourses on the 1999 Women’s World Cup Soccer Championship. Sociology of Sport Journal, 19 (2): 170-188.
  • Çınarlı, İ. (2016). ‘Stratejik’ Sağlık İletişiminin Sağlığın Tıbbileştirilmesindeki Rolü, İletişim Kuram ve Araştırma Dergisi, 43 (Güz): 203-216.
  • Çınarlı, İ. and Yılmaz, E. (2010). The Media Manufacturing The Sense of Health, Illness and Disease: Health Coverage in Turkish Newspapers. I. Lange and Z. Norridge (Eds.), In Illness, Bodies and Contexts: Interdisciplinary Perspectives (179-197). UK: Oxford.
  • Cirhinlioğlu, Z. (2012). Sağlık Sosyolojisi. Ankara: Nobel.
  • Conrad, P. (2007). The Medicalization of Society. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
  • Crawshaw, P. (2007). Governing the healthy male citizen: Men, masculinity and popular health in Men’s Health magazine. Social Science & Medicine, 65 (8): 1606-1618.
  • Demir, S.T. (2017). Medicalisation of Media; Mediatisation of Medicine: Towards an Illness Society. Journal of Media Critiques, Vol. 3, No. 10: 75-85.
  • Esiyok Sonmez, E. (2015). Tüketim Nesnesi Olarak Kadın Bedeninin İnşasında Estetik Ürün Reklamları: Cosmopolitan Dergisi Örneği. Journal of Human Sciences, 12 (2): 1131-1144.
  • Featherstone, M. (1982). The Body in Consumer Culture. Theory, Culture & Society, Vol.1, Issue 2: 18-33.
  • Featherstone, M. (2007). Consumer Culture and Postmodernism. Los Angeles: Sage Publications. Giddens, A. (2006). Modernity and Self-Identity. Cambridge: Polity.
  • Gould, N. and Gould, E. (2001). Health as a consumption object: research notes and preliminary investigation. International Journal of Consumer Studies, June 25 (2): 90-101.
  • Grieve, F. G. and Bonneau-Kaya, C. M. (2007). Weight Loss and Muscle Building Content in Popular Magazines Oriented Toward Women and Men. North American Journal of Psychology, 9 (1): 97-102.
  • Grogan, S. and Richards, H.L. (2002). Body Image: Focus Groups with Boys and Men. Men and Masculinities, 4 (3): 219-232.
  • Henderson, S. and Petersen, A. (2004). Introduction Consumerism in health care. S. Henderson and A. Petersen, (Eds.), In Consuming Health The Commodification of Health Care (1-10). London: Routledge.
  • Herbozo, S., Tantleff-Dunn, S., Gokee-Larose, J. and Thompson, J.K. (2004). Beauty and Thinness Messages in Children’s Media: A Content Analysis. Eating Disorders, 12 (1): 21-34.
  • Illich, I. (1976). Medical Nemesis The Expropriation of Health. New York: Pantheon Books. Krippendorff, K. (2013). Content Analysis: An Introduction to Its Methodology. USA: Sage.
  • Labre, M. P. (2005). Burn Fat, Build Muscle: A Content Analysis of Men’s Health and Men’s Fitness. International Journal of Men’s Health, Summer, Vol. 4, No.2: 187-200.
  • McGregor, S. (2001). Neoliberalism and health care, International Journal of Consumer Studies, June, 25 (2): 82-89.
  • Murnen, S.K.; Smolak, L., Mills, J.A. and Good, L. (2003). Thin, Sexy Women and Strong, Muscular Men: Grade-School Children’s Responses to Objectified Images of Women and Men. Sex Roles, November, Volume 49, Issue 9-10: 427-437.
  • Navarro, V. (2007). Neoliberalism, Globalization and Inequalities: Consequences for Health and Quality of Life. Amityville: Baywood Publishing.
  • Neuendorf, K.A. (2002). The Content Analysis Guidebook. California: Sage.
  • Odabaşı, Y. (2013). Tüketim Kültürü. İstanbul: Sistem.
  • Pavalanathan, U., Datla, V., Volkova, S., Charles-Smith, L., Pirrung, M., Harrison, J., Chappell, A. and Corley, C.D. (2016). Discourse, Health and Well-Being of Military Populations Through the Social Media Lens. The Workshops of the Thirtieth AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence World Wide Web and Population Health Intelligence Technical Report WS-16-15, pp. 796-803.
  • Roy, S.C. (2008). ‘Taking charge of your health’: discourses of responsibility in English-Canadian women’s magazines. Sociology of Health & Illness, Vol. 30, No. 3: 463-477.
  • Sezgin, D. (2011). Tıbbileştirilen Yaşam Bireyselleştirilen Sağlık. İstanbul: Ayrıntı. Shilling, C. (1993). The Body and Social Theory. London: Sage.
  • Shilling, C. (2002). Culture, the ‘sick role’ and the consumption of health. British Journal of Sociology, December, Vol. No. 53, Issue No. 4: 621-638.
  • Sohn, S.H. (2009). Body Image: Impacts of Media Channels on Men’s and Women’s Social Comparison Process, and Testing of Involvement Measurement. Atlantic Journal of Communication, 17(1): 19-35.
  • Thompson, B. (2011). Under Pressure: Women’s Health and Social Constructions of Aging. Master Thesis, Bachelor of Arts, Department of Kinesiology, University of Lethbridge, 2008, Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada.
  • Turancı, E. and Öz, E. (2016). Kadın Dergilerinde Sağlıklı Yaşam Sunumları: “Formsante” Dergisi Örneği. Sağlık İletişimi Sempozyumu (5-6 Kasım 2015) Bildiri E-Kitabı, 385-401.
  • Turner, B.S. (1996). The Body & Society. London: Sage. World Health Organization (WHO). Constitution of Who: Principles. Retrieved 15.09.2017 from http://www.who.int/about/mission/en/
  • Williams, S.J. and Bendelow, G. (1998). The Lived Body, Sociological Themes, Embodied Issues. London: Routledge.
  • Zola, I.K. (1977). Healthism and Disabling Medicalization. In Disabling Profession, (41-67). London: Marion Boyars.

Magazine as a Source for Promoting Health Consumption: A Comparison of “Women’s Health” and “Men’s Health” Magazine

Year 2018, Issue: 28, 239 - 255, 28.06.2018
https://doi.org/10.16878/gsuilet.436047

Abstract

Health has become a popular subject and a leading feature for media in today’s world where healthy living has gained considerable importance. In fact, the audience is exposed to numerous advices and recommendations related to health through media messages that manipulate individuals to consume more in order to be healthy. On the other hand, it has been assumed that health magazines are more influential in terms of motivating people to consume more compared to other mass media. Accordingly, this study aims to analyze the magazines “Women’s Health” and “Men’s Health” which have the highest circulation rate in 2016 in terms of leading readers to consume for a better health. It has been revealed that majority of the articles mentioning a specialist/doctor or hospital name in order to direct readers towards consumption related to their institutions was published in Women’s Health magazine. 

References

  • Aubrey J.S. (2010). Looking Good Versus Feeling Good: An Investigation of Media Frames of Health Advice and Their Effects on Women’s Body-Related Self-perceptions. Sex Roles, 63 (1-2): 50-63.
  • Atar, M.G. (2016). Gıda Reklamlarının İddia Ettikleri: Dergi Reklamları Üzerine Bir İnceleme.
  • Baudrillard, J. (1998). The Consumer Society: Myths and Structures. London: Sage.
  • Bazzini, D. G., Pepper, A., Swofford, R. and Cochran, K. (2015). How healthy are health magazines? A comparative content analysis of cover captions and images of women’s and men’s health magazine. Sex Roles, 72 (5-6): 198-210.
  • Bocock, R. (1993). Consumption. London: Routledge.
  • Brunner, B.R. and Huber, L.R.B. (2010). 101 ways to improve health reporting: A comparison of the types and quality of health information in men’s and women’s magazines. Public Relations Review, 36 (1): 84-86.
  • Bunton, R. and Crawshaw, P. (2004). Consuming men’s health: Risk, ritual and ambivalence in men’s lifestyle magazines. S. Henderson and A. Petersen, (Eds.), In Consuming Health The Commodification of Health Care (187-203). London: Routledge.
  • Burrows, R., Nettleton, S. and Bunton, R. (2005). Sociology and health promotion: Health, risk and consumption under late modernism. R. Bunton; S. Nettleton and R. Burrows (Eds.), In The Sociology of Health Promotion: Critical Analyses of Consumption Lifestyle and Risk (1-8). London: Routledge.
  • Cereyan Medya (Mart 2016). Aylık Voltaj. Retrieved 15.09.2017 from www. cereyan.com.tr/assets/pdf/1463589574.pdf
  • Christopherson, N., Janning, M. and McConnell, E.D. (2002). Two Kicks Forward, One Kick Back: A Content Analysis of Media Discourses on the 1999 Women’s World Cup Soccer Championship. Sociology of Sport Journal, 19 (2): 170-188.
  • Çınarlı, İ. (2016). ‘Stratejik’ Sağlık İletişiminin Sağlığın Tıbbileştirilmesindeki Rolü, İletişim Kuram ve Araştırma Dergisi, 43 (Güz): 203-216.
  • Çınarlı, İ. and Yılmaz, E. (2010). The Media Manufacturing The Sense of Health, Illness and Disease: Health Coverage in Turkish Newspapers. I. Lange and Z. Norridge (Eds.), In Illness, Bodies and Contexts: Interdisciplinary Perspectives (179-197). UK: Oxford.
  • Cirhinlioğlu, Z. (2012). Sağlık Sosyolojisi. Ankara: Nobel.
  • Conrad, P. (2007). The Medicalization of Society. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
  • Crawshaw, P. (2007). Governing the healthy male citizen: Men, masculinity and popular health in Men’s Health magazine. Social Science & Medicine, 65 (8): 1606-1618.
  • Demir, S.T. (2017). Medicalisation of Media; Mediatisation of Medicine: Towards an Illness Society. Journal of Media Critiques, Vol. 3, No. 10: 75-85.
  • Esiyok Sonmez, E. (2015). Tüketim Nesnesi Olarak Kadın Bedeninin İnşasında Estetik Ürün Reklamları: Cosmopolitan Dergisi Örneği. Journal of Human Sciences, 12 (2): 1131-1144.
  • Featherstone, M. (1982). The Body in Consumer Culture. Theory, Culture & Society, Vol.1, Issue 2: 18-33.
  • Featherstone, M. (2007). Consumer Culture and Postmodernism. Los Angeles: Sage Publications. Giddens, A. (2006). Modernity and Self-Identity. Cambridge: Polity.
  • Gould, N. and Gould, E. (2001). Health as a consumption object: research notes and preliminary investigation. International Journal of Consumer Studies, June 25 (2): 90-101.
  • Grieve, F. G. and Bonneau-Kaya, C. M. (2007). Weight Loss and Muscle Building Content in Popular Magazines Oriented Toward Women and Men. North American Journal of Psychology, 9 (1): 97-102.
  • Grogan, S. and Richards, H.L. (2002). Body Image: Focus Groups with Boys and Men. Men and Masculinities, 4 (3): 219-232.
  • Henderson, S. and Petersen, A. (2004). Introduction Consumerism in health care. S. Henderson and A. Petersen, (Eds.), In Consuming Health The Commodification of Health Care (1-10). London: Routledge.
  • Herbozo, S., Tantleff-Dunn, S., Gokee-Larose, J. and Thompson, J.K. (2004). Beauty and Thinness Messages in Children’s Media: A Content Analysis. Eating Disorders, 12 (1): 21-34.
  • Illich, I. (1976). Medical Nemesis The Expropriation of Health. New York: Pantheon Books. Krippendorff, K. (2013). Content Analysis: An Introduction to Its Methodology. USA: Sage.
  • Labre, M. P. (2005). Burn Fat, Build Muscle: A Content Analysis of Men’s Health and Men’s Fitness. International Journal of Men’s Health, Summer, Vol. 4, No.2: 187-200.
  • McGregor, S. (2001). Neoliberalism and health care, International Journal of Consumer Studies, June, 25 (2): 82-89.
  • Murnen, S.K.; Smolak, L., Mills, J.A. and Good, L. (2003). Thin, Sexy Women and Strong, Muscular Men: Grade-School Children’s Responses to Objectified Images of Women and Men. Sex Roles, November, Volume 49, Issue 9-10: 427-437.
  • Navarro, V. (2007). Neoliberalism, Globalization and Inequalities: Consequences for Health and Quality of Life. Amityville: Baywood Publishing.
  • Neuendorf, K.A. (2002). The Content Analysis Guidebook. California: Sage.
  • Odabaşı, Y. (2013). Tüketim Kültürü. İstanbul: Sistem.
  • Pavalanathan, U., Datla, V., Volkova, S., Charles-Smith, L., Pirrung, M., Harrison, J., Chappell, A. and Corley, C.D. (2016). Discourse, Health and Well-Being of Military Populations Through the Social Media Lens. The Workshops of the Thirtieth AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence World Wide Web and Population Health Intelligence Technical Report WS-16-15, pp. 796-803.
  • Roy, S.C. (2008). ‘Taking charge of your health’: discourses of responsibility in English-Canadian women’s magazines. Sociology of Health & Illness, Vol. 30, No. 3: 463-477.
  • Sezgin, D. (2011). Tıbbileştirilen Yaşam Bireyselleştirilen Sağlık. İstanbul: Ayrıntı. Shilling, C. (1993). The Body and Social Theory. London: Sage.
  • Shilling, C. (2002). Culture, the ‘sick role’ and the consumption of health. British Journal of Sociology, December, Vol. No. 53, Issue No. 4: 621-638.
  • Sohn, S.H. (2009). Body Image: Impacts of Media Channels on Men’s and Women’s Social Comparison Process, and Testing of Involvement Measurement. Atlantic Journal of Communication, 17(1): 19-35.
  • Thompson, B. (2011). Under Pressure: Women’s Health and Social Constructions of Aging. Master Thesis, Bachelor of Arts, Department of Kinesiology, University of Lethbridge, 2008, Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada.
  • Turancı, E. and Öz, E. (2016). Kadın Dergilerinde Sağlıklı Yaşam Sunumları: “Formsante” Dergisi Örneği. Sağlık İletişimi Sempozyumu (5-6 Kasım 2015) Bildiri E-Kitabı, 385-401.
  • Turner, B.S. (1996). The Body & Society. London: Sage. World Health Organization (WHO). Constitution of Who: Principles. Retrieved 15.09.2017 from http://www.who.int/about/mission/en/
  • Williams, S.J. and Bendelow, G. (1998). The Lived Body, Sociological Themes, Embodied Issues. London: Routledge.
  • Zola, I.K. (1977). Healthism and Disabling Medicalization. In Disabling Profession, (41-67). London: Marion Boyars.

Magazine as a Source for Promoting Health Consumption: A Comparison of “Women’s Health” and “Men’s Health” Magazine

Year 2018, Issue: 28, 239 - 255, 28.06.2018
https://doi.org/10.16878/gsuilet.436047

Abstract

Sağlıklı yaşamın giderek önem kazandığı günümüzde popüler bir konu haline gelen sağlık, medyanın da üzerinde durduğu konuların başında gelmektedir. Medya aracılığıyla izleyiciler, sağlıkla ilgili çok sayıda öneri ve tavsiyeyle karşılaşmakta ve birey, sağlıklı olmak için daha fazla tüketmeye yönlendirilmektedir. Öte yandan, kitle iletişim araçları arasında dergilerin, bireyleri tüketime yönlendirmek açısından daha etkili olduğu varsayılmaktadır. Bu doğrultuda çalışmada, sağlık dergileri olarak sınıflandırılan ve 2016 yılında en yüksek tiraja sahip olan “Women’s Health” ve “Men’s Health” dergileri, okuyucuları sağlıkları için tüketime nasıl yönlendirdikleri açısından incelenmektedir. Elde edilen sonuçlar, yönlendirme içeren yazıların çoğunun Women’s Health dergisinde yer aldığını ortaya çıkarmıştır. Dergide yer alan her yazının bir uzmanın/doktorun veya hastanenin adına yer vererek, okuyucuyu bu doğrultuda bir tüketime doğru yönlendirdiği tespit edilmiştir. 

References

  • Aubrey J.S. (2010). Looking Good Versus Feeling Good: An Investigation of Media Frames of Health Advice and Their Effects on Women’s Body-Related Self-perceptions. Sex Roles, 63 (1-2): 50-63.
  • Atar, M.G. (2016). Gıda Reklamlarının İddia Ettikleri: Dergi Reklamları Üzerine Bir İnceleme.
  • Baudrillard, J. (1998). The Consumer Society: Myths and Structures. London: Sage.
  • Bazzini, D. G., Pepper, A., Swofford, R. and Cochran, K. (2015). How healthy are health magazines? A comparative content analysis of cover captions and images of women’s and men’s health magazine. Sex Roles, 72 (5-6): 198-210.
  • Bocock, R. (1993). Consumption. London: Routledge.
  • Brunner, B.R. and Huber, L.R.B. (2010). 101 ways to improve health reporting: A comparison of the types and quality of health information in men’s and women’s magazines. Public Relations Review, 36 (1): 84-86.
  • Bunton, R. and Crawshaw, P. (2004). Consuming men’s health: Risk, ritual and ambivalence in men’s lifestyle magazines. S. Henderson and A. Petersen, (Eds.), In Consuming Health The Commodification of Health Care (187-203). London: Routledge.
  • Burrows, R., Nettleton, S. and Bunton, R. (2005). Sociology and health promotion: Health, risk and consumption under late modernism. R. Bunton; S. Nettleton and R. Burrows (Eds.), In The Sociology of Health Promotion: Critical Analyses of Consumption Lifestyle and Risk (1-8). London: Routledge.
  • Cereyan Medya (Mart 2016). Aylık Voltaj. Retrieved 15.09.2017 from www. cereyan.com.tr/assets/pdf/1463589574.pdf
  • Christopherson, N., Janning, M. and McConnell, E.D. (2002). Two Kicks Forward, One Kick Back: A Content Analysis of Media Discourses on the 1999 Women’s World Cup Soccer Championship. Sociology of Sport Journal, 19 (2): 170-188.
  • Çınarlı, İ. (2016). ‘Stratejik’ Sağlık İletişiminin Sağlığın Tıbbileştirilmesindeki Rolü, İletişim Kuram ve Araştırma Dergisi, 43 (Güz): 203-216.
  • Çınarlı, İ. and Yılmaz, E. (2010). The Media Manufacturing The Sense of Health, Illness and Disease: Health Coverage in Turkish Newspapers. I. Lange and Z. Norridge (Eds.), In Illness, Bodies and Contexts: Interdisciplinary Perspectives (179-197). UK: Oxford.
  • Cirhinlioğlu, Z. (2012). Sağlık Sosyolojisi. Ankara: Nobel.
  • Conrad, P. (2007). The Medicalization of Society. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
  • Crawshaw, P. (2007). Governing the healthy male citizen: Men, masculinity and popular health in Men’s Health magazine. Social Science & Medicine, 65 (8): 1606-1618.
  • Demir, S.T. (2017). Medicalisation of Media; Mediatisation of Medicine: Towards an Illness Society. Journal of Media Critiques, Vol. 3, No. 10: 75-85.
  • Esiyok Sonmez, E. (2015). Tüketim Nesnesi Olarak Kadın Bedeninin İnşasında Estetik Ürün Reklamları: Cosmopolitan Dergisi Örneği. Journal of Human Sciences, 12 (2): 1131-1144.
  • Featherstone, M. (1982). The Body in Consumer Culture. Theory, Culture & Society, Vol.1, Issue 2: 18-33.
  • Featherstone, M. (2007). Consumer Culture and Postmodernism. Los Angeles: Sage Publications. Giddens, A. (2006). Modernity and Self-Identity. Cambridge: Polity.
  • Gould, N. and Gould, E. (2001). Health as a consumption object: research notes and preliminary investigation. International Journal of Consumer Studies, June 25 (2): 90-101.
  • Grieve, F. G. and Bonneau-Kaya, C. M. (2007). Weight Loss and Muscle Building Content in Popular Magazines Oriented Toward Women and Men. North American Journal of Psychology, 9 (1): 97-102.
  • Grogan, S. and Richards, H.L. (2002). Body Image: Focus Groups with Boys and Men. Men and Masculinities, 4 (3): 219-232.
  • Henderson, S. and Petersen, A. (2004). Introduction Consumerism in health care. S. Henderson and A. Petersen, (Eds.), In Consuming Health The Commodification of Health Care (1-10). London: Routledge.
  • Herbozo, S., Tantleff-Dunn, S., Gokee-Larose, J. and Thompson, J.K. (2004). Beauty and Thinness Messages in Children’s Media: A Content Analysis. Eating Disorders, 12 (1): 21-34.
  • Illich, I. (1976). Medical Nemesis The Expropriation of Health. New York: Pantheon Books. Krippendorff, K. (2013). Content Analysis: An Introduction to Its Methodology. USA: Sage.
  • Labre, M. P. (2005). Burn Fat, Build Muscle: A Content Analysis of Men’s Health and Men’s Fitness. International Journal of Men’s Health, Summer, Vol. 4, No.2: 187-200.
  • McGregor, S. (2001). Neoliberalism and health care, International Journal of Consumer Studies, June, 25 (2): 82-89.
  • Murnen, S.K.; Smolak, L., Mills, J.A. and Good, L. (2003). Thin, Sexy Women and Strong, Muscular Men: Grade-School Children’s Responses to Objectified Images of Women and Men. Sex Roles, November, Volume 49, Issue 9-10: 427-437.
  • Navarro, V. (2007). Neoliberalism, Globalization and Inequalities: Consequences for Health and Quality of Life. Amityville: Baywood Publishing.
  • Neuendorf, K.A. (2002). The Content Analysis Guidebook. California: Sage.
  • Odabaşı, Y. (2013). Tüketim Kültürü. İstanbul: Sistem.
  • Pavalanathan, U., Datla, V., Volkova, S., Charles-Smith, L., Pirrung, M., Harrison, J., Chappell, A. and Corley, C.D. (2016). Discourse, Health and Well-Being of Military Populations Through the Social Media Lens. The Workshops of the Thirtieth AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence World Wide Web and Population Health Intelligence Technical Report WS-16-15, pp. 796-803.
  • Roy, S.C. (2008). ‘Taking charge of your health’: discourses of responsibility in English-Canadian women’s magazines. Sociology of Health & Illness, Vol. 30, No. 3: 463-477.
  • Sezgin, D. (2011). Tıbbileştirilen Yaşam Bireyselleştirilen Sağlık. İstanbul: Ayrıntı. Shilling, C. (1993). The Body and Social Theory. London: Sage.
  • Shilling, C. (2002). Culture, the ‘sick role’ and the consumption of health. British Journal of Sociology, December, Vol. No. 53, Issue No. 4: 621-638.
  • Sohn, S.H. (2009). Body Image: Impacts of Media Channels on Men’s and Women’s Social Comparison Process, and Testing of Involvement Measurement. Atlantic Journal of Communication, 17(1): 19-35.
  • Thompson, B. (2011). Under Pressure: Women’s Health and Social Constructions of Aging. Master Thesis, Bachelor of Arts, Department of Kinesiology, University of Lethbridge, 2008, Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada.
  • Turancı, E. and Öz, E. (2016). Kadın Dergilerinde Sağlıklı Yaşam Sunumları: “Formsante” Dergisi Örneği. Sağlık İletişimi Sempozyumu (5-6 Kasım 2015) Bildiri E-Kitabı, 385-401.
  • Turner, B.S. (1996). The Body & Society. London: Sage. World Health Organization (WHO). Constitution of Who: Principles. Retrieved 15.09.2017 from http://www.who.int/about/mission/en/
  • Williams, S.J. and Bendelow, G. (1998). The Lived Body, Sociological Themes, Embodied Issues. London: Routledge.
  • Zola, I.K. (1977). Healthism and Disabling Medicalization. In Disabling Profession, (41-67). London: Marion Boyars.
There are 41 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Journal Section Articles
Authors

Eda Turancı

Elif Eşiyok

Publication Date June 28, 2018
Acceptance Date June 1, 2018
Published in Issue Year 2018Issue: 28

Cite

APA Turancı, E., & Eşiyok, E. (2018). Magazine as a Source for Promoting Health Consumption: A Comparison of “Women’s Health” and “Men’s Health” Magazine. Galatasaray Üniversitesi İletişim Dergisi(28), 239-255. https://doi.org/10.16878/gsuilet.436047

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