The vagina is frequently represented in talk, texts, and imagery, giving us a range of sociocultural
meanings, but at the same time, is still taboo -a word that is difficult to say, and a
topic that is hard to talk about. My research aims to demarcate and explore the meanings
given to the vagina in western culture, and to examine women's accounts of their personal
meanings and experiences in relation to these socio-cultural representations. Taking a
feminist social constructionist approach, I move beyond the notion of a natural, pre-social
body to a conceptual isation of bodies deeply embedded in the socio-cultural, and assume that
socio-cultural representations form resources from which women understand and talk about
our bodies. The research draws on three different data sources: genital definitions in medical
and English language dictionaries, genital slang terms collected through questionnaires, and
talk-data from 16 group and four individual interviews with women and one group interview
with men. The analytic chapters are divided into two parts. In Part One, I present my analysis
of socio-cultural representations, first providing an overview of themes found across a range
of socio-cultural representation, and then focusing on two particular texts: dictionary
definitions and genital slang. I use content analytic techniques to explore the ideological
assumptions in dictionary definitions of women's and, comparatively, men's genitals, and to
identify the semantic categories in genital slang. In Part Two, I analyse women's talk about
the vagina, exploring the intersections between the socio-cultural and women's accounts of
their own experience. In particular, I focus on talk about vaginal size, and talk about gendered
identity. In my conclusion, I discuss the importance of such research for challenging, and
changing, the way the vagina is constructed, and for women's sexual and reproductive health