Gender and craft drinks

While it is well established that alcohol consumption is a gendered practice, the supposedly more progressive ethos of the emerging craft drinks sector suggests the possibility for great gender equality. However, as a growing body of research shows, craft drinks cultures, and that of craft beer in p...

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Main Author: Thomas Thurnell-Read
Format: Default Article
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2134/21063178.v1
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record_format Figshare
spelling rr-article-210631782022-08-10T00:00:00Z Gender and craft drinks Thomas Thurnell-Read (2620141) Sociology not elsewhere classified alcohol craft beer craft drinks gender masculinity stereotypes Sociology While it is well established that alcohol consumption is a gendered practice, the supposedly more progressive ethos of the emerging craft drinks sector suggests the possibility for great gender equality. However, as a growing body of research shows, craft drinks cultures, and that of craft beer in particular, remain heavily gendered with a number of features working to establish and maintain both the consumption and production of craft drinks as a masculine domain. In relation to consumption, research shows that assumptions about tastes and style preferences are informed by gender stereotypes, whilst branding and marketing of craft drinks products have drawn heavily on sexist imagery. The physical spaces of craft drinks consumption, such as beer festivals, brewpubs and taprooms, are heavily masculinised spaces. Similarly, the production of craft drinks is framed with reference to masculinity and imagery and language used reinforces a gendered hierarchy where female workers in the sector receive less recognition and validation. However, recent changes are noted, with a range of both online and offline initiatives seeking to empower female workers in the craft drink sector whilst challenging entrenched sexist prejudices. 2022-08-10T00:00:00Z Text Journal contribution 2134/21063178.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Gender_and_craft_drinks/21063178 CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
institution Loughborough University
collection Figshare
topic Sociology not elsewhere classified
alcohol
craft beer
craft drinks
gender
masculinity
stereotypes
Sociology
spellingShingle Sociology not elsewhere classified
alcohol
craft beer
craft drinks
gender
masculinity
stereotypes
Sociology
Thomas Thurnell-Read
Gender and craft drinks
description While it is well established that alcohol consumption is a gendered practice, the supposedly more progressive ethos of the emerging craft drinks sector suggests the possibility for great gender equality. However, as a growing body of research shows, craft drinks cultures, and that of craft beer in particular, remain heavily gendered with a number of features working to establish and maintain both the consumption and production of craft drinks as a masculine domain. In relation to consumption, research shows that assumptions about tastes and style preferences are informed by gender stereotypes, whilst branding and marketing of craft drinks products have drawn heavily on sexist imagery. The physical spaces of craft drinks consumption, such as beer festivals, brewpubs and taprooms, are heavily masculinised spaces. Similarly, the production of craft drinks is framed with reference to masculinity and imagery and language used reinforces a gendered hierarchy where female workers in the sector receive less recognition and validation. However, recent changes are noted, with a range of both online and offline initiatives seeking to empower female workers in the craft drink sector whilst challenging entrenched sexist prejudices.
format Default
Article
author Thomas Thurnell-Read
author_facet Thomas Thurnell-Read
author_sort Thomas Thurnell-Read (2620141)
title Gender and craft drinks
title_short Gender and craft drinks
title_full Gender and craft drinks
title_fullStr Gender and craft drinks
title_full_unstemmed Gender and craft drinks
title_sort gender and craft drinks
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/2134/21063178.v1
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