Can women’s bare breasts disarticulate meanings? A look into FEMEN’s street protests in Paris Cover Image

Can women’s bare breasts disarticulate meanings? A look into FEMEN’s street protests in Paris
Can women’s bare breasts disarticulate meanings? A look into FEMEN’s street protests in Paris

Author(s): Andreea Valente
Subject(s): Language and Literature Studies
Published by: Editura Universitatii Transilvania din Brasov
Keywords: visual rhetoric; feminist studies; anthropology of communication; invisible theater; street-protests

Summary/Abstract: This article examines how a radical women’s group, known as FEMEN, translate themselves in the public sphere, and what rhetorical elements they use to draw media’s attention. In other words, this study questions to what extent a radical women’s group can disarticulate mainstream discourses by exposing naked chests and holding scandalous street protestperformances in major European capitals. This contribution draws mainly on a view of translation theory developed by feminist scholars that see women’s writings as a form of translation and transgression of meanings constructed within patriarchal traditions.Furthermore, it situates street protests as part of the anthropology of communication, in which participants interact face to face and exchange verbal and non-verbal cues that may or may not facilitate meaning construction.

  • Issue Year: 2015
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 143-152
  • Page Count: 10
  • Language: English
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