Across
- 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)
- 6. What Roberts et al. (2002) argue women use to disguise discussions about menstruation to avoid personal embarrassment. (10)
- 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)
- 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)
- 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)
- 10. The name of the Netflix show that includes the scene with the the song 'Everybody Bleeds'. (3,5)
- 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)
- 12. What Tripp (2021)argues should be included in the advancement of the menstrual activism movement. (9,6)
Down
- 1. A theory that attends to structural inequalities and the implications of these inequalities for individuals (e.g boys and girls). (8,8,6)
- 3. What the 'Menstruation Project', a digital exhibition surrounding menstruation artwork, is ultimately aiming to raise awareness about. (6,6,12)
- 4. What Dioro and Munro (2000) conclude educational materials were conveying to young people regarding periods. (10,3,7)
- 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)
