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Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media . Introduction to Women ’ s Studies Robert Wonser. Gender and the Media. According to the reflection hypothesis the media only give the public what it expects, wants, or demands.
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Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media Introduction to Women’s StudiesRobert Wonser
Gender and the Media • According to the reflection hypothesis the media only give the public what it expects, wants, or demands. • In other words, the media content mirrors the behaviors and relationships, and values and norms most prevalent in society. Is the media’s reflection more like this or this? Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
However, far from passively reflecting culture, the media actively shape and create culture. • Ex: the nightly news – how much news can fit into 22 minutes? they set the agenda for public opinion. “The way the media choose themes, structure the dialogue, and control the debate—a process which involves crucial omissions—is a major aspect of their influence.” Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
The Role of the Media In addition to their role as definers of the important, the media are also the chief sources of information for most people, as well as the focus of their leisure activity. Evidence indicates many media consumers (esp. heavy TV viewers) tend to uncritically accept media content as fact. Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Symbolic Annihilation Although there’s always intervening variables (e.g. kinds of shows, and behavior of real-life role models), the media do influence our worldview, including personal aspirations and expectations for achievements, as well as our perceptions of others. Symbolic annihilation refers to the media’s traditional ignoring, trivializing or condemning of women. Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
The Male Gaze • The Male Gaze is the idea that women are portrayed in art, in advertising, and on screen from a man’s point of view, as objects to be looked at. • Fetishism of commodities takes on a whole new meaning Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
The Smurfette Principle • The tendency for works of fiction to have exactly one female amongst an ensemble of male characters, in spite of the fact that roughly one half of the population is female. Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Speaking of Smurfette… What do all of these Smurfs have in common except one? Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Should this be surprising when… The word ‘bacon’ is used more often than sexism and sexist? Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Manic Pixie Dream Girl The Manic Pixie Dream Girl (MPDG) is a stock character type in films. Film critic Nathan Rabin, who coined the term after seeing Kirsten Dunst in Elizabethtown (2005), describes the MPDG as "that bubbly, shallow cinematic creature that exists solely in the fevered imaginations of sensitive writer-directors to teach broodingly soulful young men to embrace life and its infinite mysteries and adventures." MPDGs are said to help their men without pursuing their own happiness, and such characters never grow up, thus their men never grow up. Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
MPDG Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
The Bechdel Test • Passes the test if: • 2 or more women in it who have names • they have to talk to each other • about something besides a man Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Prominent Messages in TV • Women are less important than men. • Fewer women than men on prime-time TV (39% of all major characters) • Characters played by women tend to be younger and less mature than male characters and therefore less authoritative. • 65% of female prime-time characters are in their twenties and thirites12% are in their forties and 22% of male primetime characters are in their forties. • Young female characters are typically thin and physically attractive. • In general males are given more leeway in their appearance. 46% of women on TV compared with just 16% of men are thin or very thin. Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Leading Men Age, But Their Love Interests Don’t Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Notice any pattern? Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Gender Messages on TV • There have been important changes in the portrayal of men and women in recent years. • Female: more likely (than before) to work outside the home, be strong and independent women who rely on themselves to solve problems. Shown interacting with other characters in an honest and direct way. • males: more likely to be shown as ideal husbands and do their share of housework. Even though they’re less likely to be shown doing it vs women (1-3% compared to 20-27%). Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Portrayals of Women Gender stereotypes still persist: Preoccupied with romantic relationships, shown on the job or not, defined by marital status or occupation, using romantic charm or force to get what they want. Since the 1970s: the incorporation of women’s rights and gender equality themes, often presented from what could be considered a feminist perspective. Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Women in TV and Family Films A study, lead by sociologist Stacy L. Smith, analyzed 11,927 speaking roles on prime-time television programs aired in spring 2012, children's TV shows aired in 2011 and family films (rated G, PG, or PG-13) released between 2006 and 2011. Smith's team looked at female characters' occupations, attire, body size and whether they spoke or not. Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
The Results? The team's data showed that on prime-time television, 44.3 percent of females were gainfully employed -- compared with 54.5 percent of males. Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Women in TV and Family Films Women across the board were more likely to be shown wearing sexy attire or exposing some skin, and body size trends were apparent: "Across both prime time and family films, teenaged females are the most likely to be depicted thin,“ The ratio of men to women in STEM fields was 14.25 to 1 in family films and 5.4 to 1 on prime time TV. Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Perhaps most telling are the percentages of speaking female characters in each media form: only 28.3 percent of characters in family films, 30.8 percent of characters in children's shows, and 38.9 percent of characters on prime time television were women. Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
What About Behind the Scenes? Women comprised just 15 percent of all directors, executive producers, producers, writers, cinematographers and editors working on the top 250 domestic grossing films in 2007. A shocking 21 percent of films released in 2007 employed NO women in any of these roles. Zero films failed to employ a man in at least one of these roles. Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Behind the Scenes Women made up 26 percent of the creators, executive producers, producers, writers, directors, editors and directors of photography during the 2007-08 television primetime season. Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Why are these statistics as they are? Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
What Girls and Boys See in Children’s Media In television for kids, male characters appear at about twice the rate of female characters. Animated programs in particular are more likely to portray male characters. Females are almost four times as likely to be presented in sexy attire and twice as likely to be shown with a diminutive waist. Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Children’s Media In a study of G-rated films from 1990-2005, only 28 percent of the speaking characters (both live and animated) were female. More than four out of five of the narrators were male. Eighty-five percent of the characters were white. Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Prominent Messages in Advertising: Body Clowning Goffman: The ritualization of subordination in which women are portrayed in clowning and costume-like characters. “the use of entire body as a playful gesticulative device, a sort of body clowning” is commonly used in advertisements to indicate lack of seriousness struck by a childlike pose (p. 50). Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Clowning Then… Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Clowning Now… Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Charcot used the clowning to delegitimate so-called hysterical women, and Goffman saw such representations for what they are, a way to portray women as inferior, emotionally childlike, unserious. • Over 100 years later, images of clowning women are still used to reinforce gender discrimination and position females as inferior. Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Women Laughing Alone with Salad Because, why not? Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
Photoshop The beauty secret used by all the top models? Fotoshop, by Adobe. Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media
And What about Advertising? The ad on the left was the original ad. Complaints were made. The response? The ad on the right. Not quite sure they get it… Video about this ad Killing Us Softly 4 trailer Lesson: Gender, Popular Culture and the Media