While the culture covers a wide variety of upbeat products and projects, pink is the unifying linchpin.
First a history lesson - pink has not always been coded female. Despite its well-documented connection with western femininity, pink has only been a feminine colour since the 1940s following the ingression of modernist French influences. Before this, blue had generally been associated with girls because of its correlation with the Virgin Mary; pink was connected with boys because it was a lighter shade of "masculine red".
Clearly, the meanings attached to colours change. Yellow, for example, means cowardice, as in Kenny Rogers' Coward of the County, or caution, as in traffic lights, or trippy as in Donovan's Mellow Yellow. Blue has been both a hot and cold colour, a signifier of divinity and the working class.
Pink, like other colours, means something. According to Barbara Nemitz, artist and expert on pink, "What is unique about pink is that it is assertive in whatever context it appears."
Nancy Brinker, founder of the Komen Foundation, writes in a Huffington Post blog, "People tend to think of pink as a soft and delicate colour, but not our pink ... we know that pink is strong, pink is fierce, pink is brave, and pink is mighty. Just talk to any one of the nation's 2.5 million breast cancer survivors and you'll know the power and courage of pink."
So, for Brinker, regular pink is sweet and nice, like Barbies and princesses, but "breast cancer pink" is strong and feisty. Recontextualising pink apparently shifts its meaning from girlie to girl power - from passive to active. The only problem is that in this context, girl power resembles buying power and active is really a passive form of protest.
"Show your support for breast cancer research by going shopping!" suggests one organisation. "Fight like a girl" urges a popular slogan accompanied by a pair of pink boxing gloves. For convenience, this slogan is available on tee shirts, lip balm, bags, key chains and bracelets - products completely disconnected from the actual experience of women with breast cancer. Indeed, these products suggest youth culture and girls - a demographic unlikely to develop breast cancer.
It's no wonder that Breast Cancer Action - the group that popularised the phrase "Think before you Pink" is having a pink fit!
If breast cancer pink truly represents power, how come it resembles a carnival with youthful celebrities in the pink of health? How come it adorns tee shirts with sexist slogans such as "save second base"? How come it's on buckets of KFC when obesity is a known risk factor for breast cancer? How come it implies awareness more than cause or cure?
Colour theorist Karl Schawalka has shown that pink is the colour of camouflage. He reveals, for example, that 18th century French aristocratic society appeared pink and feminine on the outside, but masked a society in which children were raised away from their mothers. Similarly, the Gruen Transfer's Todd Sampson notes, "In some cases, it can be seen that everything is okay with breast cancer because so many pink things are taking care of it."
Breast cancer pink is clearly less about power than pink dollars and rose-coloured glasses. More problematically, it has become the signifier of a new feminism more concerned with awareness than protest.
Says Ehrenreich, "Welcome to the Women's Movement 2.0: Instead of the proud female symbol ... we have a droopy ribbon. Instead of embracing the full spectrum of human colours ... we stick to princess pink."
It's surely time to "rethink pink". While it adorns carnivals, celebrities and gendered consumer products, breast cancer pink will continue to be a symbol of princesses, happiness and camouflage - not power, action and advocacy.
Donna Wyatt is a doctoral student in gender studies at Victoria University in Melbourne.
The Conversation
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