The influence of magazines on men: normalizing and challenging young men’s prejudice with “lads’ mags”

Article


Hegarty, P., Stewart, A., Blockmans, I. and Horvath, M. 2018. The influence of magazines on men: normalizing and challenging young men’s prejudice with “lads’ mags”. Psychology of Men & Masculinity. 19 (1), pp. 131-144. https://doi.org/10.1037/men0000075
TypeArticle
TitleThe influence of magazines on men: normalizing and challenging young men’s prejudice with “lads’ mags”
AuthorsHegarty, P., Stewart, A., Blockmans, I. and Horvath, M.
Abstract

Social psychologists have argued that popular UK and USA men’s magazines known as lads’ mags have normalized hostile sexism among young men. Three studies develop this argument. First, a survey of 423 young UK men found that ambivalent sexism predicted attitudes toward the consumption of lads’ mags, but not other forms of direct sexual consumption (paying for sex or patronizing strip clubs). Second, Study 2 (N = 81) found that young men low in sexism rated sexist jokes as less hostile towards women, but not as either funnier nor more ironic, when those jokes were presented within a lads’ mags context. These findings refute the idea that young men readily read lads’ mags’ sexism as ironic or ‘harmless fun.’ They show instead that placing sexist jokes in lads’ mags contexts makes them appear less hostile. The third study (N = 275) demonstrated that young men perceived lads’ mags as less legitimate after attempting to distinguish the contents of lads’ mags from rapists’ legitimations of their crimes. Implications for contemporary studies of masculinities and consumption are discussed.

Research GroupForensic Psychology Research group
PublisherAmerican Psychological Association (APA)
JournalPsychology of Men & Masculinity
ISSN1524-9220
Electronic1939-151X
Publication dates
Online13 Oct 2016
Print01 Jan 2018
Publication process dates
Deposited08 Nov 2016
Accepted25 Aug 2016
Output statusPublished
Accepted author manuscript
Copyright Statement

© Copyright 2016 American Psychological Association. This paper is not the copy of record and may not exactly replicate the authoritative document published in the APA journal. Please do not copy or cite without author's permission. The final article is available, upon publication, at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/men0000075

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1037/men0000075
LanguageEnglish
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