Essays about: "Ladylike."

Found 3 essays containing the word Ladylike..

  1. 1. Co-opting Feminism: How brands hijack social movements - A comparative study of the illustrative cases 'Redfit' & 'Ladylike'

    University essay from Lunds universitet/Företagsekonomiska institutionen

    Author : Rebecka Lindholm; Emma Håkansson; [2017]
    Keywords : Feminism; Social movement; Co-opt; Cultural branding; RedFit; Ladylike.; Business and Economics;

    Abstract : Purpose: The purpose and aim with this research was to understand how brands successfully can co-opt a social movement; specifically feminism, as part of their brand building-strategies. The phenomenon was explored by comparing one successful case, Libresse’s ‘RedFit’ campaign, with a relatively the less successful case; that is, H&M’s ‘Ladylike’ campaign. READ MORE

  2. 2. The conceptualisation of FEMININITY on English Wikipedia

    University essay from Lunds universitet/Engelska

    Author : Max Bäckström; [2014]
    Keywords : Conceptual analysis; feminity; Wikipedia; multivariate statistics; corpus linguistics; Languages and Literatures;

    Abstract : This study undertakes a quantitative and usage-based Cognitive Linguistic study on the representation and conceptualisation of FEMININITY on English Wikipedia. Contemporary information media are changing fundamentally and the place of Wikipedia in the new media space is important not only because of its influence but because it is radically different to traditional media. READ MORE

  3. 3. The Exclusion of Working-Class Women in Virginia Woolf's A Room of One's Own

    University essay from Estetisk-filosofiska fakulteten

    Author : Louise Jayakrishna; [2011]
    Keywords : Woolf; A Room of One s Own; classism; exclusion;

    Abstract : In Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own the narrator clearly expresses her rage and resentment exposing the absence and exclusion of women through history and she also focuses on the unfair position of women in her contemporary society. The narrator encourages women to emancipate themselves and to be aware of the idiosyncratic nature of society that restricts them to the private sphere. READ MORE