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The Birth Control Pill: Popular Discourse and Personal Experience

Posted on:2014-10-07Degree:M.AType:Thesis
University:Simon Fraser University (Canada)Candidate:Vogels, ShannonFull Text:PDF
GTID:2454390008461834Subject:Sociology
Abstract/Summary:
This thesis demonstrates the transformation of the birth control pill from a contraceptive technology to a lifestyle drug by comparing its historical origins to contemporary iterations and attendant issues. Drawing from biomedicalization theory, I suggest that contraception is one of many areas of life that have become subject to medical intervention, and use the pill to illustrate how contemporary health is characterized by a shifting landscape of privatization and commodification, new sources of information and knowledge, and an emphasis on optimization of the body. First, I conducted a critical discourse analysis of popular media texts related to the birth control pill in order to highlight problematic themes that characterize dialogue surrounding the pill. Secondly, these issues were compared with the results that emerged from a series of interviews with women who have taken the pill. Through exploring both the public and private realms, I argue that the pill is an agent of both biomedicalization and of gender performativity, and articulate the ways that this important pharmaceutical development enforces hegemonic standards of femininity.
Keywords/Search Tags:Birth control pill
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