Menstruation Education

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Across
  1. 2. A theoretical framework for understanding how women internalize cultural messages surrounding women’s bodies and attempt to conform in an effort to gain rewards and avoid negative consequences. (15,6)
  2. 6. What Roberts et al. (2002) argue women use to disguise discussions about menstruation to avoid personal embarrassment. (10)
  3. 7. The name of the social media activist who shows her period blood on TikTok to raise awareness of period education and who wrote the book Period Power: A Manifesto for the Menstrual movement. (5,7)
  4. 8. What Zipp and Mørk Røstvik (2020) suggest is the broader, global issue we need to be tackling surrounding periods, beyond just ensuring tax-free products. (6,5)
  5. 9. A period company that, according to Rostvik (2021), were the first to show a blood-like stain in an advert instead of blue sanitised liquid.(8)
  6. 10. The name of the Netflix show that includes the scene with the the song 'Everybody Bleeds'. (3,5)
  7. 11. A concept that encapsulates the way a topic can be surrounded by a sense of shame, embarrassment, or hesitation, commonly associated with the word 'taboo'. (6)
  8. 12. What Tripp (2021)argues should be included in the advancement of the menstrual activism movement. (9,6)
Down
  1. 1. A theory that attends to structural inequalities and the implications of these inequalities for individuals (e.g boys and girls). (8,8,6)
  2. 3. What the 'Menstruation Project', a digital exhibition surrounding menstruation artwork, is ultimately aiming to raise awareness about. (6,6,12)
  3. 4. What Dioro and Munro (2000) conclude educational materials were conveying to young people regarding periods. (10,3,7)
  4. 5. The charity that wrote a report urging for boys, as well as girls, to learn about periods at school, and suggests there is a need to talk more about the issue as many girls feel embarrassed – with the menstrual cycle tarnished with stigma and taboo. (4,13,2)