Symbolic gender boundaries in news discourse on psychotropics use and drinking: An analysis of the Swedish press debate 2000-2009 more

Forthcoming in NORA: Nordic Journal of Feminist & Gender Research, 2012.

Psychotropics and alcohol are psychoactive substances with different cultural meanings and opposite gendered associations. This paper examines the Swedish press debate on gender and psychotropics and compares it to the press debate on gender and alcohol, aiming at identifying the conditions under which gendered moral boundaries of acceptable/unacceptable consumption are defended. The study shows that boundaries acquire a heightened moral status in news stories that deal with (1) a topic related to cultural ideas about essential gender difference, (2) where the cultural status of the psychoactive substance is linked to selfish and/or hedonistic motives, and (3) where innocent victims of consumption can be identified. Moreover, it shows that the “bad” characters constructed through this moral boundary are portrayed as exhibiting “excessive masculinity” and “insufficient femininity”. On the basis of these findings, it is argued that newspaper discourse on psychotropics and alcohol still relies quite heavily on gendered and heteronormative ideas.

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