Busy Bee, Tough Mom, Farmer’s Daughter: The Canadian Business Press Portrayal of Annette Verschuren

This article challenges assertions made by business magazine editors that the business press plays no role beyond reporting on women’s executive advancement—or lack thereof. The study begins with the latest reported statistics on women’s leadership roles in corporate Canada and a summary of the most...

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Veröffentlicht in:Canadian journal of communication 2010-01, Vol.35 (1), p.49-62
1. Verfasser: Grandy, Karen
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description This article challenges assertions made by business magazine editors that the business press plays no role beyond reporting on women’s executive advancement—or lack thereof. The study begins with the latest reported statistics on women’s leadership roles in corporate Canada and a summary of the most common explanations for these numbers. The second half of the paper goes on to examine the Canadian print media coverage of Annette Verschuren, a woman who defied the executive odds. It argues that although Verschuren is prominently featured in the business press, gendered stereotyping, which has been identified as a major obstacle to women’s promotion, is reinforced in that coverage by both the framing of her story and the language and imagery used to describe her and her accomplishments.
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subjects Business
Communication
Consumer goods
Corporate officers
Editors
Eggs
Energy storage
Executives
Feminism
Gender
Gettering
Ideology
Journalism
Labels
Leadership
Magazine industry
Mass media
Media
Media coverage
Metaphor
News
Prominences
Readers
Reading preferences
Space
Stereotypes
Structural analysis
Theme
Verschuren, Annette
Women
Womens studies
title Busy Bee, Tough Mom, Farmer’s Daughter: The Canadian Business Press Portrayal of Annette Verschuren
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