"In my soft girl era" - En kritisk feministisk studie om femininitet inom soft-girl trenden
(2025) GNVK22 20251Gender Studies
- Abstract
- This thesis explores how femininity is constructed within the soft girl trend, using Butler’s theoretical framework of the heterosexual matrix and theory of (gender) performativity. By combining digital ethnography, multimodal critical discourse analysis, and a critical feminist perspective, this study aims to contribute to a deeper understanding of how femininity is expressed, reproduced and aestheticized in contemporary culture. The findings reveal that femininity is highly performative -portrayed both as an active practice and as an innate trait women ought to reclaim. Three key dimensions through which this construction occurs are: aesthetics, spirituality and self-optimization, personal qualities and(heterosexual)relationships.
This... (More) - This thesis explores how femininity is constructed within the soft girl trend, using Butler’s theoretical framework of the heterosexual matrix and theory of (gender) performativity. By combining digital ethnography, multimodal critical discourse analysis, and a critical feminist perspective, this study aims to contribute to a deeper understanding of how femininity is expressed, reproduced and aestheticized in contemporary culture. The findings reveal that femininity is highly performative -portrayed both as an active practice and as an innate trait women ought to reclaim. Three key dimensions through which this construction occurs are: aesthetics, spirituality and self-optimization, personal qualities and(heterosexual)relationships.
This study argues that through the use of specific aesthetic elements and compelling rhetoric, traditional femininity - within a heterosexual framework - is presented as something highly desirable for today's young women. In reality, the trend idealizes a form of femininity that is normative, excluding and limitative. Furthermore, this study reflects upon the soft girl trend as a post-feminist project, its popularity explained by the promise of stability in a time defined by uncertainty, as well as the limited choices available to women within patriarchal structures. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/9216003
- author
- Kopplin, Frederika LU
- supervisor
- organization
- course
- GNVK22 20251
- year
- 2025
- type
- M2 - Bachelor Degree
- subject
- keywords
- Soft girl-trenden, TikTok, postfeminism, den heterosexuella matrisen, performativitet, The soft girl trend, post-feminism, the heterosexual matrix, performativity
- language
- Swedish
- id
- 9216003
- date added to LUP
- 2025-12-15 08:53:59
- date last changed
- 2025-12-15 08:53:59
@misc{9216003,
abstract = {{This thesis explores how femininity is constructed within the soft girl trend, using Butler’s theoretical framework of the heterosexual matrix and theory of (gender) performativity. By combining digital ethnography, multimodal critical discourse analysis, and a critical feminist perspective, this study aims to contribute to a deeper understanding of how femininity is expressed, reproduced and aestheticized in contemporary culture. The findings reveal that femininity is highly performative -portrayed both as an active practice and as an innate trait women ought to reclaim. Three key dimensions through which this construction occurs are: aesthetics, spirituality and self-optimization, personal qualities and(heterosexual)relationships.
This study argues that through the use of specific aesthetic elements and compelling rhetoric, traditional femininity - within a heterosexual framework - is presented as something highly desirable for today's young women. In reality, the trend idealizes a form of femininity that is normative, excluding and limitative. Furthermore, this study reflects upon the soft girl trend as a post-feminist project, its popularity explained by the promise of stability in a time defined by uncertainty, as well as the limited choices available to women within patriarchal structures.}},
author = {{Kopplin, Frederika}},
language = {{swe}},
note = {{Student Paper}},
title = {{"In my soft girl era" - En kritisk feministisk studie om femininitet inom soft-girl trenden}},
year = {{2025}},
}