Examining the discursive landscape of women's sexual desire and implications for sexual subjectivity : a dissertation presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Psychology at Massey University, New Zealand

dc.confidentialEmbargo : No
dc.contributor.advisorRiley, Sarah
dc.contributor.authorTappin, Jessica
dc.date.accessioned2025-11-24T22:22:51Z
dc.date.issued2025-10-28
dc.description.abstractSexual desire and pleasure can be an “awkward” subject to bring up in conversation, many choosing to ignore it completely, or relegate it to the private realm. Yet, our media landscape is filled with various representation of sex that fundamentally shape the way we can think about, speak about, and enact expressions of sexual desire. A substantial corpus of feminist research suggests that discursive representations of sexual desire are highly gendered and heteronormative. These researchers have mapped cultural and social constructions of women’s sexual desire, tracing its portrayal as, for example, absent, relational, and aligned with postfeminist discourses of sexual agency. Previous scholarship has considered how these discourses are circulated within talk, and through mainstream media. A research gap remains in considering alternative feminist media, and psychological literature as sites that circulate discourses of sexual desire. The central aim of this thesis is to determine how women’s sexual desire is constructed across three sites of discourse circulation: (a) mainstream media, (b) alternative media, and (c) psychological literature, how prevalent discourses are supported, transformed, and resisted, as well as the implications for women’s sexual subjectivity and sexual agency. Foucauldian-informed discourse analysis was conducted with each set of textual data collected from those sites. Specifically, 75 advice columns or articles from mainstream media websites, 55 articles from alternative feminist publications, and 12 published articles from psychological and therapeutic journals. Key findings from these analyses indicate that (i) an essentialist biological discourse of desire is prevalent, shaping women’s sexual subjectivity in relation to men, (ii) many discourses and sexual subjectivities on offer within the texts are highly heteronormative and restrict agency outside of a narrow prescription of appropriate desire, (iii) a neoliberal incitement for women to reflect on and work on themselves in various ways underscored much of the data, and (iiii) alternative media texts provided opportunities for resistance of heterosexual norms, along with a broadening understanding of what desire is and can be for women.
dc.identifier.urihttps://mro.massey.ac.nz/handle/10179/73851
dc.publisherMassey University
dc.rights© The Author
dc.subjectSex (Psychology)
dc.subjectWomen
dc.subjectSexual behavior
dc.subjectResearch
dc.subjectEvaluation
dc.subjectWomen in mass media
dc.subjectFeminism and mass media
dc.subject.anzsrc440506 Sexualities
dc.subject.anzsrc440502 Feminist methodologies
dc.titleExamining the discursive landscape of women's sexual desire and implications for sexual subjectivity : a dissertation presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Psychology at Massey University, New Zealand
thesis.degree.disciplinePsychology
thesis.degree.nameDoctor of Philosophy (Ph.D)
thesis.description.doctoral-citation-abridgedMs Tappin examined how media and psychological literature shape how women’s sexual desire is understood. She found that mainstream sources often present women’s desire in ways that are heteronormative and linked to restrictive gendered norms. Feminist alternative media offer more expansive possibilities. This work demonstrates how these ideas shape women’s sexual agency and wellbeing.
thesis.description.doctoral-citation-longSocial discourses of sexual desire shape how people understand themselves, their relationships, and what “normal” sexuality looks like. This research explored how patterns of meaning-making about women’s sexual desire are circulated and reinforced across media and psychological literature. Findings highlighted that mainstream media and psychological texts commonly linked women’s desire to restrictive gendered norms, situated desire as an area for self-improvement, and promoted narrow, heteronormative ideas about appropriate desire. Feminist “alternative” media offered points of resistance, expanding the possibilities for how women might define, interpret, and experience desire. This research provides insight into how these discourses shape women’s sexual subjectivity, with important implications for supporting greater sexual wellbeing and agency.
thesis.description.name-pronounciationJESS IH CAH TAP IN

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