Femina (India)

Femina is an Indian magazine owned by Worldwide Media, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Times Group.[1] Femina, the oldest women's English magazine in the country, has been published for almost six decades. It has evolved to cover a broad spectrum of topics, including relationships, career, fashion, beauty, and women achievers who have left a mark in their chosen field. Femina India has 2.8 million followers on Facebook,[2] 556,600 on Instagram,[3] and 552,000 on Twitter.[4]

Femina
November 2009 issue of Femina
CategoriesWomen's magazine
FrequencyBiweekly
PublisherThe Times Group
First issueJuly 1959
CompanyWorldwide Media
CountryIndia
Based inMumbai
LanguageEnglish, Hindi, Bengali and Tamil
WebsiteFemina India website
OCLC1327320

The bimonthly magazine branched out into regionals with Femina Hindi,[5] Femina Bangla[6] and Femina Tamil.[7] Apart from this, it publishes Femina Salon & Spa, which is distributed directly to Indian beauty businesses monthly, and verticals such as Femina Brides, Femina Parenting,  and Femina Cookbook at varying periodicity.

Some of its Marque properties are Femina Beauty Awards,[8] Femina Women Awards,[9] Femina Stylista,[10] Femina Showcase,[11] and few more.

History and profile

Femina was founded in 1959.[1][12] The magazine was first published in July 1959.[12] It has organized and sponsored the Femina Miss India beauty pageant since 1964. From 1994 to 1999, it also sponsored the Femina Look of the Year contest to send an Indian contestant to the Elite Model Look competition.

Editor 1959–present

Frene Talyakhan, after working as an editor with magazines like Trend and Flair, became the editor of Femina in 1959, when Flair was bought over by the Times of India group. The staff under her editorship were Ina Sen, Vimala Patil, Anita Sarkar and Nina Merchant. Patil became the editor of Femina in 1973, and remained so for the next 20 years.[13] Patil was followed by Sathya Saran, who served as the editor from 1993 till 2005. Amy Fernandes held the post for a brief period of two years, i.e., from 2005 to 2007, post Saran, and was followed by Tanya Chaitanya, who is serving as the current editor of the magazine.

Tagline 1976–present

Femina's efforts to keep in sync with the changing times, becomes evident through its choice of tagline that accompanied the issues over the years. It exemplifies what kind of women it was trying to target at a particular time, as well as, what image of itself it wanted to be associated with. The tagline played a crucial role in the magazine's market strategy.[14] The March 1976 issue has the tagline "Something exciting to look forward to every fortnight." By February 1978, the tagline is reduced to three precise words, "Thoughtful, Contemporary, Aware." From January to July 1981, the tagline, "The Exciting World of Women", aligns Femina's identity more as a women centric magazine. By August 1981, it changes to "A woman's window to the world." In September 1982 issue, the tagline accompanying the Femina logo is "Woman at her best."

In the 1990s, the magazine carried the tagline "For the woman of substance." By 2000, the tagline shifts to "Generation W", replacing the earlier label, and so addressing all the woman of a generation, and not just a select few women who are considered to be of substance, becoming more inclusive and broad.[15] It shifts to "Believe" till 2009 and then by 2010 changes to "For all the women you are." According to Tarun Rai, the CEO of Worldwide Media the reason behind the new tagline was to "celebrate how far the contemporary Indian woman has come" and that Femina "continues to be a beacon of change for her."[16] For Prachi Tiwari, Femina's brand publisher, this tagline is to pay a tribute to the "multifaceted woman of today, who is more than one person, playing more than one role."[17]

In 2014, Femina relaunched with the tagline "Be Unstoppable", which is its running tagline as of 2019. For Tarun Rai, "Be Unstoppable" seeks to capture what the Femina brand believes in, which is that the modern women of India today have the confidence "to lives their lives on their terms and achieve more."[18]

"Prescription" Column

A new column was introduced in the late 1980s, specifically dedicated to answer any form of sexual dilemmas faced by women. Queries were answered by gynaecologists like Dr. Prakash Kothari and Dr. Mahinder Watsa.[19]

gollark: I quite like marmite rice cakes.
gollark: That is a vague question.
gollark: No.
gollark: Weird that even that is hard to get into I guess, although something something COVID-19 influence on the sector.
gollark: Oh.

References

  1. Dana McLachlin; Tara Dhakal; Pramada Menon (Spring 2012). "For All the Women You Are": National Identity, Gender, and Tradition/Modernity in Indian Women's Magazines". School for International Training India. Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  2. https://www.facebook.com/feminawoman
  3. https://www.instagram.com/feminaindia/
  4. https://twitter.com/FeminaIndia
  5. "महिलाओं की पत्रिका/मैगजीन - फ़ैशन, सौंदर्य, रिश्ते, स्वास्थ्य, खानपान – Women's Hindi Magazine". फेमिना हिन्दी (in Hindi). Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  6. "মহিলাদের পত্রিকা- ফ্যাশন, সৌন্দর্য, সম্পর্ক, স্বাস্থ্য- Fashion, Beauty & Lifestyle Tips for Women in Bengali". ফেমিনা বাংলা (in Bengali). Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  7. "பெண்களுக்கான இதழ் – ஃபேஷன், அழகு, உறவுகள், ஆரோக்கியம் | ஃபெமினா தமிழ் | Women's Magazine - Fashion, Beauty, Relationships, Health | Femina Tamil". பெமினா (in Tamil). Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  8. "Nykaa.com Femina Beauty Awards 2018: winners". femina.in. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  9. "Our winner in the education category, Aarti Naik, grew up in the slums of Mumbai before she started SAKHI, an organisation focused on providing safe learning spaces for girls in their slums. She received the award from actor Tisca Chopra and Sanjay Bhagwanani, GM, Distribution Channel, Havells". femina.in. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  10. "Femina Stylista North 2018 ends on a grand note". femina.in. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  11. "Beauty, trendy fashion and fun at the Femina Showcase". femina.in. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  12. Amrita Madhukalya (19 July 2015). "Of recipes and G-spots: On India's 'magazine era'". dna. Retrieved 25 September 2016.
  13. "CHPATERIV THE ROLE AND PROBLEMS OF WOMEN JOURNALISTS IN CONTEMPORARY INDIA Women and Social Change in Contemporary India The par" (PDF). webcache.googleusercontent.com. Retrieved 17 March 2019.
  14. Thapan, Meenakshi (2009). Living the Body: Embodiment, Womanhood and Identity in Contemporary India. SAGE Publications. p. 67. ISBN 9788178299013.
  15. Thapan, Meenakshi (2009). Living the Body: Embodiment, Womanhood and Identity in Contemporary India. SAGE Publications. p. 66. ISBN 9788178299013.
  16. Halve, Anand (31 December 2011). Darwin's Brands: Adapting for Success. SAGE Publishing India. ISBN 9788132119098.
  17. Halve, Anand (31 December 2011). Darwin's Brands: Adapting for Success. SAGE Publishing India. ISBN 9788132119098.
  18. says, Linda. "Femina adopts new positioning and tagline via "Be Unstoppable" campaign via DDB Mudra West – Campaign Brief Asia". Retrieved 17 March 2019.
  19. Dewey, Susan (2009). ""Dear Dr. Kothari...": Sexuality, Violence against Women, and the Parallel Public Sphere in India". American Ethnologist. 36 (1): 124–139. doi:10.1111/j.1548-1425.2008.01104.x. ISSN 0094-0496. JSTOR 27667533.


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