02581nam 2200385 450 991058598590332120231006172529.0(CKB)5690000000026477(NjHacI)995690000000026477(EXLCZ)99569000000002647720230516d2022 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierCash Flow the businesses of menstruation /Camilla Mørk RøstvikLondon, United Kingdom :UCL Press,2022.1 online resource (x, 218 pages)1-78735-575-6 Blood Money: The Menstrual Product Industry in Late Capitalism -- SABA: A Norwegian Fairy Tale? -- Mölnlycke, SCA, Essity: Swedish Menstrual Exceptionalism -- Tambrands Incorporated: Femtech and the -- Development of Soviet Tampax -- Procter & Gamble: Always Like a Girl -- Kimberly-Clark: Kotex Marketing from Groovy Girls to Carmilla -- Thinx and Clue: Startups and the Unsettling of the Menstrual Product Industry -- Free bleeding? Menstruation Beyond Consumption.The menstrual product industry has played a large role in shaping the last hundred years of menstrual culture, from technological innovation to creative advertising, education in classrooms and as employers of thousands in factories around the world. How much do we know about this sector and how has it changed in later decades? What constitutes 'the industry', who works in it, and how is it adapting to the current menstrual equity movement?Cash Flow provides a new academic study of the menstrual corporate landscape that links its twentieth-century origins to the current 'menstrual moment'. Drawing on a range of previously unexplored archival materials and interviews with industry insiders, each chapter examines one key company and brand: Saba in Norway, Essity in Sweden, Tambrands in the Soviet Union, Procter & Gamble in Britain and Europe, Kimberly-Clark in North America, and start-ups Clue and Thinx. By engaging with these corporate collections, the book highlights how the industry has survived as its consumers continually change.Cash FlowMenstrual products industryMenstruationMenstrual products industry.Menstruation.338.767Røstvik Camilla Mørk1281135NjHacINjHaclBOOK9910585985903321Cash Flow3018203UNINA