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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11129/2456

Title: I Dumped My Husband For a Turkish Toyboy
Authors: Zoonen, Liesbet van
Kuipers, Giselinde
Türksoy, Nilüfer Hamid
Türksoy, Nilyufer Hamid
Eastern Mediterranean University, Faculty of Communication, Department of Communication Studies
Keywords: British press; intersectionality; newspapers; romance tourism; tabloids; Turkish toyboys
Issue Date: 14-Apr-2016
Publisher: Routledge
Citation: Hamid-Turksoy, N., van Zoonen, L., & Kuipers, G. (2014). “I Dumped My Husband For a Turkish Toyboy” Romance tourism and intersectionality in British tabloid newspapers. Feminist Media Studies, 14(5), 806-821.
Abstract: In this article, we analyse how British tabloid newspapers represent relationships between mature British women and the younger Turkish toyboy lovers they meet (and sometimes look for) on their holiday; a practice that is often considered as the female counterpart to male sex tourism, albeit labelled differently as “romance tourism.” Employing a combination of thematic, lexical, narrative, and visual analysis, we examine how the British tabloids make sense of the contradicting social categories and power relations at play in these encounters, in particular with respect to age, gender, nation, and economic position. We consider these contradictions as typical for the intersectionality of gender identities, and use the tabloid stories about romance tourism as a means to study how such intersectionality becomes manifest in everyday practices. We find that the tabloids construct only one dimension of identity as key to women’s lives, that is the one of motherhood and more abstractly of caring for others. In addition, they present women as highly vulnerable to exploitation by foreign, exotic others, who are portrayed either as evil con men or—in the sporadic upbeat, happy-ending story we found—as dependent and passive objects of women’s desires.
Description: Due to copyright restrictions, the access to the publisher version (published version) of this article is only available via subscription. You may click URI (with DOI: 10.1080/14680777.2013.792855) and have access to the Publisher Version of this article through the publisher web site or online databases, if your Library or institution has subscription to the related journal or publication.
URI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14680777.2013.792855
http://hdl.handle.net/11129/2456
ISSN: 1468-0777 (print)
1471-5902 (online)
Appears in Collections:COM – Journal Articles: Publisher & Author Versions (Post-Print Author Versions) – Communication Studies

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