Bottling Gender:ACCOMPLISHING GENDER THROUGH CRAFT BEER CONSUMPTION
Nathaniel G. Chapmana, Megan Nanneyb, J. Slade Lellockb, Julie Mikles-Schlutermana
aArkansas Tech University, bVirginia Tech
AbstractAccording to recent industry reports, sales of craft beer have doubled over the last six years, and are set to triple by 2017 (Klonoski 2013). In addition to increasing popularity, there have been significant changes in the consumption patterns of craft beer. While beer has maintained a position as the most popular alcoholic beverage among men age 21-34, a recent Gallup poll (2012) indicates that craft beer has surpassed wine as the most popular beverage for women of the same age group (Klonoski 2013). In light of this trend, there has been little research done to explore gender dynamics in craft beer consumption and the craft beer industry. This paper seeks to understand the increasing popularity of craft beer among women by: 1) exploring beer as a gendered object, 2) illuminating the experiences of women in the craft beer culture and industry, and 3) examining how gender is done, redone, and undone in craft beer spaces. Drawing from a discursive content analysis of an online beer community, we seek to consider the gendered nature of beer and how gender is both reconfigured and upheld, allowing for the possibility for new consumption patterns.
Keywords: craft beer, gender, consumption, gender roles, gender-blindness, gender relations
Word Count: 8,809
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Bottling Gender:
ACCOMPLISHING GENDER THROUGH CRAFT BEER CONSUMPTION
Introduction
Research on alcohol-related behaviors consistently finds persistent gender gaps in the frequency
and amount of alcohol men and womeni consume (Atkinson, Kirton, and Sumnall 2012; Watson
2014). While men are more likely than women to drink at all, to drink more heavily, and to
“binge drink,” these gender gaps in alcohol consumption differ largely by type of alcohol--men
are more likely to drink hard liquor and beer, while women traditionally are more likely to
consume wine and mixed beverages. Alcohol consumption, in turn, has been associated with
gendered behaviors and spheres. Certain types of drinks, drinking behaviors, and drinking spaces
are associated with manliness and masculinity, while others are associated with womanliness and
femininity (Darwin forthcoming). Historically, beer has been considered to be masculine.
Beer can be classified along many dimensions, but a particularly important one is the
distinction between domestic and craft. The Brewer’s Association distinguishes between the two
types based on three criteria. In order for a brewery to be considered craft it must be small
(production cannot exceed six million barrels of beer per year), independent (no more than 25
percent of the brewery may be owned by someone, or firm, that is not in the craft industry), and
traditional (a brewery should utilize both traditional and innovative brewing techniques)
(Brewer’s Association 2013). Typically, domestic beer is characterized by light flavors (pilsner
and lager style beers) and the use of non-traditional brewing ingredients such as corn or rice
(e.g., Budweiser, Bud Light, Coors, and Pabst Blue Ribbon). In contrast, craft beer encompasses
a wide array of styles and flavors. Flavors can range from light and sweet (e.g., witbier,
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hefeweizen) to dark and roasty (e.g., porter, imperial stout, brown ale), and everything in
between (e.g., IPA, lambic, wild ales, barrel-aged stouts). With over four thousand breweries
operating in the US today there are more and more beers coming to market every day.
According to Klonoski (2013) recent industry reports show that craft beer sales have
doubled over the last six years, and are set to triple by 2017. In addition to increasing popularity,
there have been significant changes in the consumption patterns of craft beer. While beer has
remained the most popular alcoholic beverage among men ages 21-34, a recent Gallup (2012)
poll indicates that craft beer has surpassed wine as the most popular beverage for women of the
same age group (Klonoski 2013). Additionally, the 2014 Great American Beer Festival estimates
that nearly 37 percent of all craft beer drinkers are women (Darwin forthcoming).
While many theories exist as to why this notable shift has occurred for women including
more gender-equitable or gender-targeted marketing and advertisements, increased labor
participation, equality and independence from feminism, liberal attitudes about consumption
from capitalism, and craft beers artisanal flavor profiles that are akin to wine and cocktails
(Clarke 2012; Klonoski 2013; Snider 2016; Atkinson et al. 2012; Bogren 2011). However, few
studies have examined the meanings and social contexts of femininity and masculinity as a result
of this shift. Given women’s increased consumption of craft beer compared to other alcoholic
beverages, and given beer’s association with masculinity, the question we must address is not
about understanding the importance of gender patterns in alcohol consumption, but rather the
ways in which the accomplishment of gender itself is negotiated through cultural practices of
alcohol consumption.
The purpose of our research is to understand the increasing popularity of craft beer
among women by: 1) exploring beer as a gendered object, 2) illuminating the experiences of
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women in the craft beer culture and industry, and 3) examining how gender is done, redone, and
undone in craft beer spaces. The focus of the present study is to explore the gendered nature of
beer itself and the gender dynamics within the craft beer industry. Previous research has
suggested women have been targeted by the craft beer industry as an “untapped” market, and as
such, craft beer is advertised to appeal to certain women (Bogren 2011). Little research,
however, has examined the gendered nature of beer, how women negotiate gender in masculine-
dominated spaces, and men’s responses to masculinity’s reconfiguration. Drawing from a
discursive content analysis of online beer community forums, we seek to consider the new ways
in which womanhood is accomplished in a masculine sphere and the ways in which manhood is
redone in response, allowing for the possibility for new consumption patterns.
Literature Review
Doing gender, redoing gender, undoing gender
Unlike previous research that considers consumption differences between men and women as a
natural result of inherent gender traits, we consider gender as an accomplishment of personal
identities, performative actions, and interpersonal interactions. Rather than gender being
something that a person inherently “is,” gender is something we “accomplish” through an
“individual’s repeated ‘doing (of) gender’ that (re)creates gender, meaning that gender is not the
precursor of action but the after-effect” (Atkinson et al. 2012, 367; West and Zimmerman 1987,
2009; Kelen 2010; Bogren 2011, 2013). In other words, there is no naturalness to one’s gender-
one’s femininity or masculinity- but rather, gender is socially constructed and re-constructed
through these everyday acts. Drawing upon social constructivist, postmodern, queer,
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ethnomethodological, and gender theories, multiple ways of understanding how gender is done
are put into conversation with one another below, albeit often through points of contention.
West and Zimmerman (1987, 127) move gender from a natural, ascribed status to an
achieved status: “not a set of traits, nor a variable, nor a role, but the product of social doings”
including everyday actions and personal interactions. Gender, in this sense, is a form of
communication that translates a person’s designated sex category through their gendered
activities- their clothing, their mannerisms, etc. West and Zimmerman uphold the idea that
gender is never not existing-- there is no genderless world. Rather, the actions that people take,
even to consciously subvert gender norms and roles, actively redo what gender means. In other
words, gender is a constant reiteration of itself.
Yet, some researchers such as Risman (2009), Deustch (2007), Kelen (2010), Butler
(1990, 2004) and Bogren (2011, 2013) argue that if gender can be done--if it can be constructed--
there must be a way in which gender can be undone or not done at all (deconstructed).
Addressing this issue, Kelen (2010) summarizes two ways in which gender undoing is discussed
in the literature. First, she discusses the ethnomethodological opposite to doing gender: gender is
not present if it is not made relevant in a conversation. Claiming that gender is an
accomplishment, this presumes that gender is an end goal and that the human can pre-exist
without gender if one refuses to do gender. Yet, as Bogren (2011) highlights, this raises the
question of whether gender really is undone or if it is just not present. Many researchers refute
this concept, including West and Zimmerman (2009), arguing that even in gender-neutral or
“gender-blind” spaces, gender and gendered inequalities can be reproduced. While not discussed
at length in the literature, this redoing of gender in seemingly neutral or blind (or even
genderless) spaces may be akin to colorblind-racism (Bonilla-Silva 2003; Benokraitis and Feagin
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1987; Scott 1988; Anderson and Johnson 2003). Rather than gender not existing in these spaces,
in a post-gender society, gender and gender inequalities are individualized and create a false
sense of equality by arguing that everyone has a fair chance to succeed in society because gender
does not matter. Thus, the onus of succeeding--and the blame when one fails-- in a seemingly
“gender-neutral” or “genderless” context is placed on the individual while perpetuating gender
inequality by ignoring the larger social structure and power behind gender’s social construction.
Secondly, Kelan (2010) highlights that gender can be undone in the sense that the gender
binary--the classification of sex and gender into two distinct, opposite, and disconnected forms
of masculine and feminine--is undone. Kelan (2010) builds upon Butler (1990, 2004) by arguing
that we need to undo gender not so that there is no gender, but undo the normalization and
naturalization of gendered categories so that other possibilities of gender and sex arrangements
may become possible. Unlike ethnomethodologists, who discuss the daily face-to-face
interactions in which gender is accomplished, Butler argues how the very viability, legitimacy,
and conception of a human subject is created through the repeated stylization of the body that
constructs gender and the regulatory frames that produce and naturalize these “realities.” Gender,
in this sense, is not a performance, but should been seen as performative, where gender is
constructed and made real (rather than accomplished) through, and consequently depends upon,
repeated stylized acts. She explains, “Gender is the apparatus by which the production and
normalization of masculine and feminine take place along with the interstitial forms of hormonal,
chromosomal, psychic, and performative that gender assumes” (Butler 2004, 42). In other words,
the very categories, identities, and very biology of “man” and “woman” (as well as masculine
and feminine) are constituted and perpetually made real.
Craft beer and gender production
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Because gendered identities and lives are consistently performed, (re)structured, and made real
through our interactions, consumption practices are one possible avenue to examine the ways in
which gender gaps occur as well as how gender is accomplished. Consumption activities, such as
consumption of alcohol, serve as a way to distinguish oneself from other--men from women--by
drawing upon ideals of what a “real man” or a “real woman” drinks (Bourdieu 1984; Goffman
1976; Atkinson et al. 2012; Peralta 2007; Thurnell-Read 2013; Leyshon 2005). For example,
Peralta (2007) and Thurnell-Read (2013, 2.4) show that drinking is the
‘doing’ of masculinity through competition in the quantity and pace of alcohol
consumption and, notably, the management of physical symptoms as ‘holding’ your
drink. The idealised male drinking body is therefore one that freely consumes alcohol, in
doing so, demonstrates restraint and control in relation to the potential detrimental effects
of drunkenness on bodily composure.
Meanwhile, even the type of beverage consumed serves to accomplish gender. Darwin
(forthcoming), for example, highlights how flavor profiles and alcohol type are associated with
gender roles: masculinity is associated with dark and/or domestic beers as well as whisky and
bourbon while femininity is associated with more artisanal, fruity (and sugary) drinks such as
sour and fruit beers, mixed cocktails, and wine. In this instance, then, consumption patterns are
not just a result of the gendered identities of the consumers, but rather, consumption patterns
explain ways in which gendered categories are constantly renegotiated. As such, this paper
considers alcohol-related practices of men and women to be “intimately bound up with a broader
set of culturally embedded understandings of what it is to be a man or woman and how
masculinity and femininity should be ‘performed’ and accomplished” (Atkinson et al. 2012,
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337). What you drink, in other words, is a gendered a way of becoming a man or a woman--to do
masculinity and femininity (see also Oudshoorn, Saetnan, and Lie 2002; Kirkham 1996).
Yet, while beer has a longstanding association with masculinity, as women begin to enter into
this masculinized space with craft beer, how is masculinity and femininity redone in light of
these new consumption behaviors?
Previous research by Bogren (2011, 2013), Atkinson et al. (2012), and Darwin
(forthcoming), among others, have discussed the ever-changing notions of femininity and
masculinity in alcohol consumption, largely as a result of changing media images. According to
Giddens (1991), the media does not simply mirror the reality of alcohol-consumption culture, but
the media also plays a role in (re)producing and potentially altering the social norms around
gender (Gerbner, Gross, Morgan and Signorielli 1986; Baillie 1996; Atkinson et al. 2012). For
example, Atkinson et al. (2012) found that alcohol-related advertisements in women’s magazines
primarily featured champagne or sparkling wine to depict womanhood as one with glamour,
sophistication, social elitism, and delicacy akin to celebrity. As women enact this idealized
femininity, drinking serves as a source of social, economic, and cultural capital that is associated
with higher society. Men’s magazines, in comparison, solely featured beer in masculinized
spaces such as pubs or sporting events, compared to any other form of alcohol, thus attributing
drinking beer to achieving normative masculinities. Such masculinity in the context of drinking
beer presented itself as the predominant form of “manhood” a man could achieve- a hegemonic
masculinity. Connell and Messerschmidt (2005, 832) explain that there are multiple forms of
masculinity that are integrated with power relations: “Hegemonic masculinity was understood as
the pattern of practice (i.e., things done, not just a set of role expectations or an identity) that
allowed men's dominance over women [and other subordinated masculinities] to continue.”
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Thus, the man who can accomplish the highest form of masculinity by drinking beer and
embodying these ideal traits reaffirms one’s manhood over another.
Yet with the emergence, rise, and increasing preference of craft beer in the alcohol
market by men and women, the question shifts from how is gender done to ask how
masculinity(ies) and femininity(ies) are undone/redone. Bogren (2011, 2013), for example, uses
this framework to examine how gender roles and behaviors surrounding drinking, especially for
women, in Swedish newspapers has changed overtime. She finds that the media stories on
alcohol consumption construct multiple gender roles beyond the dichotomous “feminine woman”
and “masculine man” including good parenthood and responsible motherhood, the “party girl,”
and the career woman. With new possibilities for women, especially, to enter “masculine”
drinking spaces and adopt more “masculinized” roles, Bogren idealizes the ways in which
masculinity can be produced and adopted by both male and female bodies (see Halberstam 1998;
Kelan 2010).
Despite these new possibilities for women to enter the masculine realm of beer, however,
Bogren (2011, 2013) and Darwin (forthcoming) also find resistance to femininity’s undoing as
well as shifts in masculinity. Bridges and Pascoe (2014) explain that while hegemonic
masculinity, and generally what it means to be masculine, has transformed over time, the value
and power of masculinity remains intact. Described as hybrid masculinity, the authors explain
that as men draw on “bits and pieces” of feminized or marginalized masculine identities and
reintegrate them into their own gender identities, the manner in which masculinity borrows from
other genders does not actually fundamentally alter gender and sexual inequality. For example,
Bogren (2011, 161) notes that regardless of gender’s undoing through images of girls who drink
like men, the media also reproduces traditional and binary gender roles: “The explicit criticism
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of young women, articulated in alarmist terms, warns readers that young women engage in
improper, if not immoral, behavior and encourages readers to inform young women that gender
equality does not mean that they may drink ‘like men.’” Similarly, Darwin (forthcoming) finds a
gendered hierarchy in craft beer preferences that assigns masculinity to the beer types that are
regarded as more culturally legitimate such as darker beers and higher ABVs and assigns
femininity to the beers that are widely regarded inferior such as fruit beers or sours. In other
words, while women can drink craft beer, they do not drink “real craft beer” or they are not
“legitimate” beer drinkers compared to men. In both of these cases, the authors find that
regardless of women’s entrance and adoption of these more masculinized roles and the greater
flexibility for men to appreciate more artisanal and complex tastes, thus undoing the meaning of
masculinity and femininity beyond binary gender categories, a hierarchy of gender roles is still
enforced.
The present study
While previous literature has laid a solid foundation for explaining gender gaps and the
accomplishment of gender in alcohol-consumption, what is missing from these narratives is the
voices of the actual consumers themselves. To date, only Darwin (forthcoming) has critically
examined preferences of craft beer drinkers, yet she does not specifically examine the ways in
which femininity and masculinity are undone/redone. As such, in this paper, we seek to examine
craft beer drinkers’ narratives surrounding accomplishing and re-negotiating gender through craft
beer consumption. We ask: (1) In what ways are craft beer and craft beer spaces gendered; (2)
What are the experiences of and responses to women who consume craft beer; and (3) In what
ways are femininity and masculinity done, undone, and redone through women’s presence in the
craft beer culture?
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Methods
Research site and data collection
To answer these questions, we searched for discussion threads and comments pertaining
specifically to gender and craft beer consumption in the online beer community known as
“beerit” (http://reddit.com/r/beer) between March and April 2016. beerit was selected primarily
due to the sheer size of the community, but also its notably active user base. At the time of
writing, the beerit community, which was originally founded in 2008, had over 177,000
subscribers. While a few other online, beer-focused communities have higher numbers of
members (e.g., http://www.beeradvocate.com had 589,803 at the time of writing), we were not
able to find nearly as many discussions centered exclusively on gender in general and women in
particular as they relate to craft beer consumption.
In 2015, a beerit user conducted a survey on the demographics of the community and
reported the findings to the user base. In order to provide some context for our study, we
reproduce the findings of this survey here with the user’s permission. According to the survey
which includes responses from 883 individuals, beerit is predominantly white (96 percent), men
(90 percent), and younger adult (77 percent in the 21-34 year old range). According to
reddit.com’s “Audience and Demographics” page, the audience for the site in general was 53
percent men and 46 percent women. While it is often difficult to confirm the identity of
informants in pseudo anonymous settings, such as Internet-based forums, we took the user’s
word at face value when they disclosed their gender identity. For instance, many commenters
would preface their responses with phrases such as, “As a woman,…”.
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Given our particular interest in the relationships between gender and craft beer
consumption, we generated thousands of hits for discussion threads and comments by searching
keywords such as “gender”, “sex”, “female”, “male”, “women”, “men”, etc. These comment
threads were initially archived in their entirety. We then filtered these results by only selecting
those of which were directly related to the topic of women’s attitudes, practices, and experiences
as craft beer consumers. In sum, we collected 27 full comment threads and analyzed over 1,300
comments and sub-comments. These comment threads ranged in year from 2010 to 2016.
Despite the public nature of beerit, we removed usernames from the analysis to protect
anonymity.
Data analysis
Using a line-by-line approach, we selected comment excerpts that pertained specifically to
gender and craft beer consumption. The comments that make up our data varied greatly in length
from a single sentence to several complete paragraphs. While our aim is not to produce a
grounded theory, our coding procedure followed grounded theory methods guidelines described
by Corbin and Strauss (1990). We drew on grounded theory methods given the exploratory
nature of our inquiry. Other advantages of a grounded theory methods approach include, “the
ability to conceptualize,” and its ability to “provide data depth and richness” (Hussein, Hirst,
Salyers, and Osuji 2014). Our data analysis process was iterative and nature, but generally fit
with the following procedures. First, we read through the corpus of comments several times and
performed open coding. This process entailed systematically labeling words, phrases, and
sentences within each excerpt that represented meaningful expressions in order to get a sense of
what was “happening” in our data. Drawing on the constant comparative method (Glaser and
Strauss, 1967; Corbin and Strauss, 1990; Charmaz, 2014), we used axial coding to assign these
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codes into emergent thematic clusters to create categories and subcategories by reorganizing and
refining our coding scheme throughout the analysis. Throughout this process, we wrote both
analytic and self-reflexive memos which were included in our analysis. By examining emergent
patterns and relationships between our codes and categories we were able to identify several
recurring themes across our data. Below, we begin with a discussion of beer as a gendered object
and conclude with patterns of doing, redoing, and undoing gender.
Results/Analysis
Beer as gendered object
In order to more fully illustrate the processes of doing, redoing, and undoing gender; we first
examine beer as a gendered object. Evidence of the gendered nature of beer is identified in
patterns of 1) masculine and feminine styles of beer, 2) sexism in both the production and
consumption of craft beer, and 3) notions that beer should be/is genderless. Central to the notion
of beer as gendered object are discussions of masculine and feminine styles of beer. In these
threads we find assumptions that women and men innately prefer different styles of beer, and
that these styles are distinctly different. Women are perceived to prefer lighter and sweeter
styles, while men are perceived to prefer darker and more aggressive styles. By gendering beer
itself in this way, it constructs a set of normative expectations for craft drinkers, one that is
distinctly masculine or feminine. In addition to perceptions of preference based on gender, beer
itself is perceived to be more or less feminine based on certain attributes. Beers that are more
fruit forward (i.e. “fruity” beers, fruit flavored beers, lambics, and wheat beers), lighter in flavor
and color, and sweeter beers are often perceived to be feminine styles of beer.
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Additionally, by gendering beer in this way, it leads consumers to believe that certain
styles of beer are superior to others strictly based on the perceived gender of the beer itself
(Darwin forthcoming). One man craft drinker shared this experience, “I have tried introducing
my female friends to stronger/better/more interesting beers, and while they might occasionally be
pleasantly surprised, they’re still sticking to their light, fruity beers.” Masculine beer is perceived
to be more robust in flavor, darker in color, “stronger” (i.e. has a higher ABV than domestic
beer), more aggressive, and therefore, superior to lighter styles of beer. In the data, masculine
styles of beer were often referred to as “real” beer, as if to suggest that feminine styles were not
only less-than, but not even categorically the same product. One commenter suggests to another
that if his girlfriend only likes sweet beer “it may be possible that she will never like real beer.”
This further perpetuates the gendered hierarchy in craft beer.
The notion of beer as gendered object is further perpetuated through the marketing of
beer. There seems to be a conflict between marketing to women, the perception of women
drinkers, and women’s actual preferences. Our data suggest that women’s choices of beer are
significantly constrained due in part to sexist discourse, marketing, and social boundary work. In
reference to marketing of “pink”ii beer one commenter says, “Quite simple … it’s not aimed at
women. It’s aimed at chicks … who probably buy right into it. Don’t be offended – people are
allowed to be different.” Other commenters agreed that “pink beer” was not marketed to women
that preferred craft beer, “Meh, I don’t see any reason to get all upset about it. It’s clear that it
isn’t meant for women that actually like good beer, but for women that like drinking trendy, pink
things and were normally drinking Select 55.”
Throughout the analysis we encountered a number of comments that suggested that
marketing “pink” beer in fact seemed to deter women from drinking craft beer rather than it
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encouraging them. One commenter felt very strongly about marketing pink beer to women, “I
think the marketing is atrocious. I can’t comment on the actual beer since I have never had
it. However, the marketing is so off-putting I’m not so sure I even want to try it.” Another
echoed this sentiment saying, “I feel like I see this empowerment-through-pink thing pretty
often. Fuck pink. I hate pink. I don’t see it as empowering.” While producers create and market
craft beer based on gendered stereotypes and use the color pink--as well as other feminized
profiles such as high heels or “feminine flavors”-- to represent these stereotypes, many women
perceive this as not only an inaccurate portrayal of their interests, but also as a negative
stereotype. One commenter even flat out stated, “Chick beer is an offensive representation of
what women want.” Most women seem to want an equitable beer that is marketed as beer, not as
a beer for women, “I know I hate the pink, not everything girl related need[s] to be pink!” By
adding the tagline or qualifier that pink beer is for women, then this beer automatically becomes
devalued, or less than, real beer for real beer drinkers. This furthers the idea that beer should be
genderless, or at the very least, not based on stereotypes.
Generally, we found that while certain styles of beer were associated with certain
genders, many craft beer drinkers feel that beer should be “genderless.” One of the limitations of
our data is that we selected threads that discussed craft beer specifically. Therefore, we cannot
assume that all women beer consumers share this sentiment, however, we believe that this view
is shared more broadly among craft beer drinkers than domestic beer drinkers. Our data show
that a number of craft beer drinkers, both men and women (when self-identified in the thread),
feel that beer should be genderless. This is expressed by two commenters in a thread who
claimed, “ … how about, thou shalt drink whatever the fuck thou wants,” and “I don’t think a
beer is male or female. If you like it, drink it,” As these two commenters highlight in almost a
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contradictory manner than the ideas presented above, regardless of ideas of beer as a masculine
object or certain types of beers qualifying as “real” beers (and therefore producing “real” beer
drinkers), many people articulate a gender-neutral or gender-blind ideology when it comes to
beer and gender. That is to say, no particular style of beer should be gendered, as well as the fact
that drinking beer should not be gendered. To these craft drinkers, gender should not be a factor
that is relevant or otherwise present when it comes to consumption behaviors or craft beer
spaces. These drinkers have adopted a gender-blind perspective that, on the surface, appears to
undo gender in these spaces.
Yet, as Benokraitis and Feagin (1987), Scott (1988), Anderson and Johnson (2003), and
Kelan (2010) highlight, this does not necessarily mean that gender is undone to the point in
which it no longer exists (beer is not genderless). Rather, there is evidence that this gender-blind
ideology perpetuates sexism by reducing differences to an individual trait or characteristic while
ignoring larger structures that contribute to gendered inequality and give preference to
hegemonic masculinity within beer. For example, many do not understand and degrade any
attempts to promote women brewers; one commenter joked: “Why does it matter that women
[brewers] make it? As long as it tastes nice? Although I suppose we can expect it to go well with
sandwiches now.” On the one hand, we see the possibility for gender integration and equality, or
perhaps even a gender-neutral environment in which people, regardless of their gender, can
participate in craft beer culture. Yet, within the same breath, these seemingly negotiated gender
roles and behaviors are once again reclaimed through normative expectations of what a
(masculine) man and a (feminine) woman should or should not do. In this sense, women can
drink--or even make--craft beer, and that is not worthy of attention as long as the gender
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hierarchy remains intact. So, what does women’s consumption of craft beer ultimately have to
say about how gender is done? Can beer’s ties to masculinity be undone/redone?
Doing, redoing, and undoing gender
As women’s participation in craft beer culture steadily increases, the meanings, behaviors, and
expectations around beer as a masculine gendered object continue to be negotiated, and the ways
in which gender is actively constructed is not straightforward. Below, we discuss evidence of
ways in which women’s presence strives to undo and redo beer’s essentialized masculinity all
while these new gender dynamics face resistance to change through men’s gatekeeping that
perpetuates normative power hierarchies.
Gender is undone (and possibly redone) when individuals disrupt and challenge the
naturalization of the gender dichotomy (Butler 2009; Kelan 2010). This does not necessarily
mean that gender is undone in the sense that gender no longer exists (à la Deutsch 2007 and
Risman 2009), but rather, the ways in which gender is treated as innate, fixed, natural, binary,
and potentially even regulatory are undone at the seams so that gender becomes a possibility in
which one can explore, do, and be. In these discussion threads we find evidence of women
undoing/redoing womanhood and femininity through their continued refusal to be devalued as
craft beer drinkers. First, when women display frustration with the notion of “pink” beer or
feminine styles of beer, we argue they are undoing gender. One woman writes, “I love
condescending gestures disguised as some kind of empowerment!” While another woman says,
“I understand that pink can be edgy, flirty, feminine, fun, blah blah blah, but fuck it. It clashes
with my red hair and I don’t want it on my beer.” While these marketing tactics may bring some
women into the craft beer movement, most women already immersed in the culture reject the
stereotypical feminine notions that, because they are women, they must like pink beer (and its
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associated feminine traits). To be a "real" craft beer drinker, one does not (and arguably should
not) have to embrace traditional notions of masculinity. And, to be "real" women, one does not
have to embrace traditional notions of femininity.
We also find women undoing gender by demonstrating themselves to be knowledgeable
and experienced beer drinkers. Women in these threads share many instances about not being
taken seriously by their peer (man) beer drinkers or being overlooked as someone who knows
something about beer. In response to these experiences, women express a need to prove
themselves as legitimate beer drinkers (for further discussion of cultural capital, see Darwin
forthcoming). For example, a self-identified woman commented, “I’m an Untappdiii nerd, so I’ve
been tempted to pull out my phone and show them the 300+ beers I’ve checked into as a way of
proving myself. Either that, or just start wearing brewery shirts around all the time.” Others
speak of correcting liquor store attendants and bartenders about “a beer fact that was blatantly
wrong.” One woman even illustrates her experience saying, “Depending on the tone/attitude of
that bartender, I could really enjoy countering a couple of those incorrect descriptions with a well
phrased, polite, pointed correction. And then a smile.” Through these actions of asserting
oneself, we see women enacting nontraditional-feminine traits to legitimize their own presence
and qualifications. Through this un-pairing of womanhood=femininity, what it means to be a
woman drinker (including their preferences and roles) is no longer naturally separate from that of
a man drinker. That is not to say that their gender does not matter, but the naturalness between
how a woman or a man participate and experience craft beer is no longer assumed. Almost by
claiming, “Hey! I know more than you…” women are staking a claim in their rightful seat at the
metaphorical (and even literal) bar.
18
While these perceptions are noted in the data, we also find evidence of men undoing and
redoing what it means to be masculine/a man within the craft beer industry. For example, many
men noted liking sweeter and lighter flavor beers that are marked with a more feminine gender.
One commenter admits to having “a sweet tooth” for such beers as ciders, lambics, and chocolate
stouts. Yet, as Bridges and Pascoe (2014, 246) argue, while the ideas behind what it means to be
masculine may be becoming more fluid through “selective incorporation of elements of identity
typically associated with various marginalized and subordinated masculinities and – at times –
femininities into privileged men’s gender performances and identities,” gender inequalities
between men and women are not eliminated. Rather, hybrid masculinities “work in ways that not
only reproduce contemporary systems of gendered, raced, and sexual inequalities but also
obscure this process as it is happening” (247). In this instance of craft beer, then, while the
meaning of masculinity may be adapting to allow for men to drink more feminized, fruity beers,
the hierarchy and dominance of masculinity (and its association with manliness) is not changed.
Men feel like they can enjoy their feminized beer, but must still enact behaviors--must still do
their gender--so that they remain a “true” masculine man: “I always make sure she [wife] orders
first, because it is a little emasculating to order a delicious, refreshing, summertime wheat beer
and have her order a fucking Triple IPA.” In this case, masculinity’s redoing/undoing only
furthers normative gender expectations.
Another response to the changing gender dynamics within the craft beer industry includes
the strict gatekeeping by men in the culture that determines women’s admittance (allowance)
under the auspices of hegemonic masculinity. Hegemonic masculinity includes patterns of
exhibiting power and control over women and other versions of masculinity, which we argue
includes beer drinking and knowledge of beer. In this analysis there are extensive discussions
19
about men “encouraging” women to drink beer and how to “introduce” women to beer. One man
comments, “Beer is by no means a man’s game. I think it is our job as male brewers and
enthusiasts to get all of the women we know (perhaps, starting with our girlfriends or wives)
excited about the beverages we love so much!” While beer may not be only a “man’s game,”
within this gatekeeping, men have a rightful and seemingly natural ownership over beer. Not
only do we find that men feel a need, want, and almost an “obligation” to introduce and
encourage women to drink beer, but they also have given thought as to “how” to do this that
reflects normative gendered expectations. One thread begins with the question, “My girlfriend
doesn’t like beer in general. What do I do to bring her in?” Fifty-two comments follow that, in
general, suggest a process of introducing her to a variety of sweet beers and then build up to
hoppier, stronger flavored beers. One reader suggests:
Get her some of that Framboise Lambic, or something like that. Now that she knows that
beer can be a pretty wide gamut of tastes/aromas, move on from there. Maybe move to
Abita’s strawberry lager. I’d move from the fruitiest of fruit-laden beers, and then move
into something more mainstream. Hefeweizen might be a good bet. Anyway it’s worth a
shot.
What we find repeatedly is men establishing that beer drinking and knowledge of beer is a
masculine domain, controlled by men, and as such they are the gatekeepers. Sometimes, this
domain is even restricted by men. One beerit user writes, “Let her not drink beer. More beer for
you. I would be pretty pissed if my wife continually drank the last beer in the fridge.” Another
discussant argued, “Don’t get her into beer drinking at all!!!! She’ll drink all of your beer and
then get fat.” Whether or not women can access the craft beer industry, in both cases, is at the
mercy of men.
20
A second response we find of men to the changing gender dynamics is the sexualization
and objectification of women beer drinkers and brewers. This is a way for men to perform, or do,
their masculinized (and heterosexualized) dominance. One particular way of performing
hegemonic masculinity is through the sexualization and objectification of women and other
forms of masculinity in order to demonstrate power and control (for more, see Rich, 1980; Ward
and Schneider 2009; Connell and Messerschmidt 2005). In one discussion about Abby Titcomb,
a woman brewer, there are many comments about her appearance, rather than her beer. She is
described as “hot and sexy,” “adorable,” and “absurdly sexy.” Her name (Titcomb) is sexualized
and references are made to having sex with her: “Had to Google her because of all the sex I want
to have with her.” Women who drink beer are also sexualized. One commenter writes, “I know
loads of women who just like ‘beer,’ they’d laugh their tits off at this,” while another says, “I just
wanna say that it’s very sexy to hear women talk about real beer on here.” The marginalization
of women in the context of craft beer consumption delegitimizes them as authoritative
consumers and upholds a gender system of masculine dominance. While women may enter the
beer culture, they are still there as women, and masculinity, in these cases, is redone to
concretize its rightful and natural ownership of beer, what it means to be a man, and
subsequently women. Women don’t like “real” beer; they are there to please men.
Finally, while we found a detachment (undoing) of femininity to womanhood, in some
cases, we find the exact opposite: women’s embracing of feminine presentation and roles. While
at first glance this may appear to be a lack of foresight or critical thinking as to gender inequality
in the craft beer culture, it may be possible that women’s femininity and full participation in the
culture may redo/undo femininity through its reclamation of strength and value. In other words,
rather than perpetuating the devaluing of femininity by rejecting feminine roles, presentation,
21
and identity--and rather than upholding masculinity by enacting more masculine traits and values
such as avoiding “pink beer”--perhaps women should and can be both feminine and drink “real”
craft beer by upholding femininity as a valuable trait. One self-identified woman craft drinker,
for example, claims, “My personal style is ultra-feminine, and I’ve never encountered any kind
of shenanigans when ordering, drinking or brewing beer. I tend to favor west coast IPAs, barrel-
aged brews, and sours, and it’s gotten to the point that my beer guy will take advice from me.”
Another beerit user commented,
Until recently, it seems to me that there was a bit of a stigma attached to women drinking
beer (or stigma women perceived, even if it wasn’t real). Essentially, that drinking beer is
not feminine, just as drinking an apple martini is not masculine. So, many women may
not be used to beer because of this stigma and, thus, don’t have much of a taste for beer
beyond a simple pilsner like Stella.
Through this recoupling of femininity and womanhood, gender roles may remain intact, but they
also may be redone/undone so that the gender hierarchy that men hold over women (and over
other masculinities/femininities) loses its power. In other words, this may establish more
inclusive conditions while resisting models of assimilation (Butler 2004, 4).
Discussion and Conclusion
Drawing upon the opinions and experiences of both women and men in the craft beer culture, we
illuminate underlying notions of sexism and gender hierarchies in the craft beer culture. Similar
to other gendered contexts (see Cairns, Johnston and Baumann 2010; Pilgeram 2007; Olive,
McCuaig, and Phillips 2015 for examples), beer drinkers see their consumption behaviors
intrinsically connected to their gender identity, just as gender remains central to their sense of
22
self. Our research allows us to examine the ways in which an individual’s beer consumption is
not a result of one’s gender, but rather actively communicates, renegotiates, and accomplishes
gender itself. In other words, beer becomes a gendered object through the social norms, rules,
and expectations surrounding who can drink craft beer, as well as how, when, and where. Yet, as
we see in our findings, as more and more women begin to prefer beer over other drinks, the
presumed natural binary between beer as masculine (i.e. for men) and other “pink” drinks as
feminine (i.e. for women) is challenged, reinforced, and altogether redone/undone.
We highlight three themes in our research that emerge in craft beer drinker’s discussions
surrounding women and beer, including (1) beer as a gendered object, (2) women’s experiences
and emergence in the craft beer culture, and (3) experiences within and policing the boundaries
of craft beer spaces. As women’s consumption of craft beer, presence in craft beer spaces, and
participation in craft beer culture increases, the meaning of masculinity and femininity
consequently changes--beer is no longer associated with just masculinity. Rather, craft beer, as a
gendered object, is only possible through the interactions of its consumers as active participants
in the social construction of gender (Oudshoorn et al. 2002; Kirkham 1996). By gendering beer
in this way, its consumers construct and enact a set of normative expectations that are distinctly
masculine and feminine.
Despite these constructions of gender, we also highlight possibilities for and enactment of
resistance and change. Through the undoing/redoing gender framework, we note multiple
possibilities in which gender roles and expectations are renegotiated by craft beer drinkers to
establish women as “real” beer drinkers including liking different styles of beer, participating in
craft beer culture as knowledge experts, correcting false facts and accusations, and even rejection
of targeted marketing schemes. Yet, we also see reaffirmations of prevailing gender norms and
23
hierarchies through hypersexualization, devaluing of femininity, and gatekeeping, thus
perpetuating, in some forms, masculinity’s dominance and power within these spaces. The
gender of who makes and/or drinks a beer supposedly may not matter, but as gender dynamics
change, we see the ways in which gender roles and norms that largely perpetuate men’s rightful
and natural ownership are created and enforced within the community.
It is important to note that these data provide only one snapshot into the ever-changing
gender dynamics within craft beer. As the styles of beer continue to become more daring and
innovative, more breweries open, marketing develops, communities form, and the qualifications
for craft beer change, the meanings behind masculinity and femininity--man and woman--will
continue to develop. Further research should include closer examinations into the intersections of
other forms of identities such as class, race, and age within the craft beer community to examine
how these gender dynamics are further complicated by social location. Additionally, while we
focus on craft beer consumers in this research, more research is needed on the production side of
craft beer--including the marketing decisions, female brewers and female-owned breweries (such
as New Belgium), and beer groups and events for women (such as Beer Birds in Canada, Hops
for Honeys in Alabama, Barley’s Angels, Pink Boots Society, and Ales4Females, a female-only
event at Left Hand Brewing). Further, due to our methodological approach, our research is
somewhat limited in that it only focuses on attitudes, perceptions, and experiences of people
within craft beer. A potentially fruitful avenue of research may compare the views expressed
within niche craft beer communities to more mainstream discourse on gender and craft beer
consumption. Finally, more research should examine the possibilities for pink beer (such as High
Heel Brewery): can pink beer be one possible solution for gender inequalities and/or does it just
perpetuate archaic stereotypes?
24
As we argue in this paper, looking at craft beer consumption not as a result of gender
differences, but rather influential and a cause for the accomplishment of gender itself highlights
the possibilities for ways in which gender dynamics change over time. If craft beer culture allows
for both reproduction and resistance of masculinity and femininity, we can argue that craft beer
culture is open and fluid to changing gender roles, experiences, and expectations for both
consumers and producers. This constant push and pull between who can and cannot--should and
should not--drink craft beer also highlights the points of tension surrounding the value of
masculinity and femininity within the gender hierarchy. Only through these tensions can the
gender binary become negotiated, contested, and redone to increase all people’s participation in
craft beer to the fullest.
25
Acknowledgements
Nathaniel G. Chapman (corresponding author) is an Assistant Professor of Sociology in the Department of Behavioral Sciences at Arkansas Tech University. His research focuses on craft beer and the production of culture in the United States. He has co-edited a volume on the socio-cultural dynamics of the craft beer industry and attendant culture. He is also co-editing a special issue of The Journal of Popular Music Studies that will explore racial dynamics within Electronic Dance Music (EDM). Currently, he is conducting research on gender and consumption in the craft beer industry, and the construction of authenticity in craft brewing.
Megan Nanney (she/her/hers pronouns) is a doctoral student in the Department of Sociology with a concentration in Women’s and Gender Studies at Virginia Tech. She graduated from Smith College in 2013 with a dual B.A. in Sociology and The Study of Women and Gender and completed her Sociology M.S. in 2015 at Virginia Tech. Megan’s current research focuses on trans inclusive admissions policies at women’s colleges and draws from critical trans, queer, and feminist perspectives in regards to the (re)construction of the feminine. She currently serves as the Managing Editor of Sociology of Race and Ethnicity. In her spare time, she enjoys serving as the editor-in-chief for VT’s LGBTQ Magazine, The Interloper.
J. Slade Lellock is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Sociology at Virginia Tech. His research interests include culture, digital sociology, consumption, taste, and qualitative methodologies. His work generally focuses on the symbolic and expressive realms of culture such as music, art, film, and dress as well as social and symbolic boundaries. Given his interest in the cultural dimensions of digital social life, he has conducted ethnographic fieldwork in multiple online communities.
Dr. Julie Mikles-Schluterman received her Ph.D. in sociology from the University of TN, Knoxville in 2007 and began teaching at Arkansas Tech University (ATU). She is an associate professor of Sociology and Assistant Director of the University Honors Program. Her teaching and research areas focus on research methods, sociology of the family and sociology of gender. She has been involved in numerous service programs at ATU, winning the Faculty Award of Excellence for Service in 2015. In particular, her focus has been with raising awareness about gender issues. Since 2011 she has hosted the Red Flag Campaign on to the ATU campus each spring educating students about dating violence and sexual assault.
Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
26
Notes
27
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i Throughout the text, we deliberately choose to utilize gendered language of “man” and “woman” so as
to not conflate sex with gender identity in order to keep open the possibilities for gender identity and
trans lives. Only in instances of direct quotes utilize sex markers of “male” and “female.”
ii “Pink” beer is a brand name of light beer marketed to women, but is also a generic term used to
describe “feminine” alcoholic beverages.
iii Untappd, whose slogan is “Drink Socially,” is a widely-used social networking platform that allows
users to catalog, rate, and review beers, breweries, and bottle shops.