The effects of “Happy” media on women’s coping tendencies / Sharon Grace Kwan and Haryati Abdul Karim

Over the past years, there has been increasing emphasis on the roles of media in influencing people’s moods and emotions; however, there is limited research on social media’s role in providing access to “happy” media and how exposure to such content can help women cope with everyday stress. This res...

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Main Authors: Grace Kwan, Sharon, Abdul Karim, Haryati
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Communication & Media Studies 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/90488/1/90488.pdf
https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/90488/
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spelling my.uitm.ir.904882024-07-06T08:42:58Z https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/90488/ The effects of “Happy” media on women’s coping tendencies / Sharon Grace Kwan and Haryati Abdul Karim ejoms Grace Kwan, Sharon Abdul Karim, Haryati Women. Feminism Over the past years, there has been increasing emphasis on the roles of media in influencing people’s moods and emotions; however, there is limited research on social media’s role in providing access to “happy” media and how exposure to such content can help women cope with everyday stress. This research involved exploring the types of “happy” media women consumed to cope with their stress, an examination of the exposure to “happy” media on women’s emotion and stress management, and, finally, an investigation on the effects of “happy” media on women’s coping tendencies. Under the Mood Management Theory, six women were purposively sampled from lower-income (B40) background for semi-structured interviews. After analysing the data thematically, two themes emerged: “happy” media as a stress and emotional management tool, and as an effective coping tool. Our results suggest that women developed better emotional and stress management after consuming “happy” media content via social media platforms. Additional results also suggest that exposure to “happy” media inspired women to acquire new skills or improve their current skills, leading to positive emotional and coping outcomes. Overall, this research highlights “happy” media effects in fulfilling women’s cognitive, emotional, and desired coping outcomes through hedonistic and eudemonic content. Faculty of Communication & Media Studies 2024-01 Article PeerReviewed text en https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/90488/1/90488.pdf The effects of “Happy” media on women’s coping tendencies / Sharon Grace Kwan and Haryati Abdul Karim. (2024) e-Journal of Media and Society (e-JOMS) <https://ir.uitm.edu.my/view/publication/e-Journal_of_Media_and_Society_=28e-JOMS=29/>, 7 (1). pp. 37-57. ISSN 2682-9193 (Submitted)
institution Universiti Teknologi Mara
building Tun Abdul Razak Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Mara
content_source UiTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.uitm.edu.my/
language English
topic Women. Feminism
spellingShingle Women. Feminism
Grace Kwan, Sharon
Abdul Karim, Haryati
The effects of “Happy” media on women’s coping tendencies / Sharon Grace Kwan and Haryati Abdul Karim
description Over the past years, there has been increasing emphasis on the roles of media in influencing people’s moods and emotions; however, there is limited research on social media’s role in providing access to “happy” media and how exposure to such content can help women cope with everyday stress. This research involved exploring the types of “happy” media women consumed to cope with their stress, an examination of the exposure to “happy” media on women’s emotion and stress management, and, finally, an investigation on the effects of “happy” media on women’s coping tendencies. Under the Mood Management Theory, six women were purposively sampled from lower-income (B40) background for semi-structured interviews. After analysing the data thematically, two themes emerged: “happy” media as a stress and emotional management tool, and as an effective coping tool. Our results suggest that women developed better emotional and stress management after consuming “happy” media content via social media platforms. Additional results also suggest that exposure to “happy” media inspired women to acquire new skills or improve their current skills, leading to positive emotional and coping outcomes. Overall, this research highlights “happy” media effects in fulfilling women’s cognitive, emotional, and desired coping outcomes through hedonistic and eudemonic content.
format Article
author Grace Kwan, Sharon
Abdul Karim, Haryati
author_facet Grace Kwan, Sharon
Abdul Karim, Haryati
author_sort Grace Kwan, Sharon
title The effects of “Happy” media on women’s coping tendencies / Sharon Grace Kwan and Haryati Abdul Karim
title_short The effects of “Happy” media on women’s coping tendencies / Sharon Grace Kwan and Haryati Abdul Karim
title_full The effects of “Happy” media on women’s coping tendencies / Sharon Grace Kwan and Haryati Abdul Karim
title_fullStr The effects of “Happy” media on women’s coping tendencies / Sharon Grace Kwan and Haryati Abdul Karim
title_full_unstemmed The effects of “Happy” media on women’s coping tendencies / Sharon Grace Kwan and Haryati Abdul Karim
title_sort effects of “happy” media on women’s coping tendencies / sharon grace kwan and haryati abdul karim
publisher Faculty of Communication & Media Studies
publishDate 2024
url https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/90488/1/90488.pdf
https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/90488/
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score 13.211869