‘Off to the best start’? a multimodal critique of breast and formula feeding health promotional discourse

This study critically examines the multimodal discourses of baby feeding practices in contemporary health promotion in the UK. Comparing two parallel texts from the ongoing Start4life campaign (one dedicated to breastfeeding, the other to bottle/formula feeding), our multimodal critical discourse an...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brookes, Gavin, Harvey, Kevin, Mullany, Louise
Format: Article
Published: Equinox Publishing 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/44413/
Description
Summary:This study critically examines the multimodal discourses of baby feeding practices in contemporary health promotion in the UK. Comparing two parallel texts from the ongoing Start4life campaign (one dedicated to breastfeeding, the other to bottle/formula feeding), our multimodal critical discourse analysis identifies a series of recurring, multi-semiotic strategies through which these texts aim to promote breastfeeding as the most desirable, natural and even morally responsible method of infant nutrition. These discursive strategies, we argue, are underpinned and driven by neoliberal assumptions about infant feeding, health and risk, which fail to take into account the structural constraints that affect the take up the ‘ideal’ of breastfeeding, all the while propagating unobtainable and often contradictory notions of total motherhood and familial relations – discursive moves that can have negative consequences for the health and wellbeing of new mothers.