Tuesday, September 3, 2019
The Effects of Printed Media on Gender Roles Essay -- Media Stereotypi
       I will be looking at womenââ¬â¢s 'to-be-looked-at-ness', and examining the     representations of women as objects of the male gaze and male desires.       In simple terms, a stereotype is the application of one (usually     negative) characteristic to a whole group. The stereotype is an easy     concept to understand, but there are some points you need to consider     when looking at media representations with regard to stereotyping. For     a stereotype to ââ¬Ëworkââ¬â¢ it needs to be recognisable to the audience and     when so recognised, then judgements are made about the subject. If the     stereotype is negative, then the judgements will also tend to be the     same. The predictable thing about stereotypes is that they are     predictable! They create a sense of order and also provide a sense of     identity (even if it is a negative one!) Stereotypical judgements and     stereotypical media representations can (and often do) lead to     different treatments of groups by other groups, (sadly, often quite     discriminatory).        If we define ââ¬Ëmaleââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëfemaleââ¬â¢ all we are doing is a biological     classification, but if we think about the terms ââ¬Ëmasculineââ¬â¢ and     ââ¬Ëfeminineââ¬â¢ we have to think about certain roles and lifestyles. Put     simply, the words have very specific ideological assumptions of what     is ââ¬Ënatural behaviourââ¬â¢ for each sex. The portrayal of men and women in     traditional roles is very prominent and also very contested in     advertising. Characters, both male and female are constantly placed in     roles, socially constructed to 'match' their gender. In other words,     society has constructed (made) a set of ââ¬Ëtruthsââ¬â¢ about what is the     ââ¬Ërightââ¬â¢ way for a man or a woman to behave.     The media, of cou...              ... adverts     to highlight these changes. These reversals are, however, often     portrayed in a sarcastic or less serious than in other adverts.       Without these gender roles maybe society would have had an adverse     effect on the media and what we portray as acceptable would in fact be     outrageous.       Why is the media so important? ââ¬âOne may ask. More often than not, itââ¬â¢s     the way we get most of our information. Information we tend to think     of as the ââ¬Å"truth.       Overall when looking at different types of media I got the general     impression that women are portrayed in a worthless provocative manor.     This was repeated in the same way across the whole range and always     looked as if they were being exploited. Society have dictated to the     media what they want to buy and see, all thatââ¬â¢s left for the media to     do is provide this product.                        
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