(In)Visible Bleeding: The Menstrual Concealment Imperative

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Abstract

Wood offers a new conceptual framework, “the menstrual concealment imperative”, to explain how women’s internalization of menstrual discourse contributes to their disembodiment and self-objectification through menstrual “management”. This chapter critiques the medical system and menstrual hygiene industry for the (bio)medicalization of menstruation that establishes women as diseased and as unable to know their bodies. Wood suggests that women’s vigilance about menstrual concealment is not freely chosen, but a required self-disciplinary practice rooted in menstrual discourse that characterizes menstruation as stigmatized, taboo, and therefore shrouded in secrecy. The concealment imperative is a form of social control and a body project that keeps women disembodied and objectified. As a conceptual tool it has implications to understand the various ways that women’s bodies are regulated both at individual and social levels.

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Wood, J. M. (2020). (In)Visible Bleeding: The Menstrual Concealment Imperative. In The Palgrave Handbook of Critical Menstruation Studies (pp. 319–336). Springer Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-0614-7_25

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