Wednesday, March 25, 2009

While in Vegas...


I couldn't help but snap shots of ridiculous advertisements around Las Vegas. I can't get over them!

This advertisement was for TAO, a restaurant in the Bellagio.

Women in the Paper

Something that has been gaining the interest of fellow students has come to my attention. Have you ever stopped to consider the amount of “face-time” women get in newspapers? Pick up a newspaper, and you may see where I’m about to go with this…
I found this study that was done in 2004 which actually tracks the progress of newspapers and their photographs of women since the first study in 1974. It also takes into account the photo’s cutline, therefore not only observing the implicit message of the photo, but the explicit as well. Despite the thirty-year time difference between studies, the facts remain the same.
I’m sure you’ll be surprised to hear this (Can you sense the sarcasm?), but after studying 184 issues of four Connecticut newspapers which provided 8960 images, “in most pages and in most roles, photos of men far outnumbered those of women...It is also clear that the roles in which women and men are portrayed are clustered stereotypically professional and sports for men and spouse for women.”
SPOUSE for women? That’s what gets women in newspapers? Marrying a successful man? There it is, ladies! You want publicity? Become a spouse!
The real problem here is that the media plays a leading role in our formation and even our maintenance of social and, sadly, stereotypical roles. Only 6% of papers studied featured women as main characters. If a newspaper is to provide the “news,” why are women being left out of lead but placed in supporting roles?
Straight from the study..Important!
“Stories about women has smaller headlines and were shorter, there were eight times more front=page news stories about men than women, men appeared in sports stories 14 times more often than women…In business news, women were rarely quoted…Stories about women tend to be soft news…Women often identified by their spouse’s name rather than their own first name…Women made the news in subordinate, and sex-object roles more than men, who were in the news because of occupation or sports.” (122)
In the area of professional sports we find the same problem. (*Remember that the study only focuses on adults, so high school sports are left out of the findings.) Photographs of men appeared 14 to one.
Another ridiculous thing that was said in the study was this: “Men are most likely to make page one because they are doing serious, important things. Women make page one because they are interesting.” Take it for what it is, the study’s director was the one who said this quote…She’s a woman.
The study, completed by Barbara Luebke of the University of Hartford, mentioned that the news media is there to answer a very general question to its public. That question being “What’s new?” “If in practice that answer generally overlooks women or treats them stereotypically, then the media help perpetuate negative images of women” (122). Bingo! There’s a start.
If we’re not looking at magazines or other medium geared towards women’s issues, empowerment, health, beauty or any of the other aspects that come with being a woman, than the images of women in positive light are few and far between. It just doesn’t seem fair that women don’t make the final edit in newspapers.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Just a little extra...



Thanks to feministing.com (Jessica Valenti (RUTGERS GRAD!) and her sister Vanessa run the site), this advertisement has been brought to my attention!

This is EXACTLY what I'm talking about. Check out feministing.com and see what Jessica had to say...

Portrayals of women in the media- NOT always good. This advertisement LOOKS pretty, but really, it's SEXIST and gross.

It's a pill...so you swallow it. But, come on! Really?


check out imedeen.com for more information on their products. (if you care...)

Women as "Victims" in the Print Media

This week, my post is going to be dealing with my favorite medium- newspapers!

I've recently read a study that was conducted in 2004 by Phyllis Anastasio and Diana Costa. These women,using college students and big newspapers (Think New York Times, The Washington Post, Philadelphia Inquirer...), researched to see how the newspaper's representations covering "victims" of domestic violence, rape, harassment and murders effected victim blame and victim harassment. After reading 148 articles collected over a 7 week period pertaining to cases of violence, students were asked to give their reactions. Anastasio and Costa's findings were interesting...but require some background to full understand.

Being a Women's and Gender Studies major, the issue of rape victims being identified in the media comes up often in debates and discussion. Recently, in my Media Ethics and Law class, this issue arose. Typically, newspapers and other forms of media keep names out when the victims are female, but identify male victims regardless of the situation. Now, there's two arguments that can be made regarding this.

The first can be made supporting the depersonalization of victims. Some will argue that leaving a victim's (talking about women)name out of the press can help curb future harassment and alienation. In some cases, the victim may be concerned with being embarrassed or shamed.

The counter argument, which Anastasio and Costa's findings prove, is that when names are omitted, the victim is then "dehumanized" and seen as an "object" (Not Sally Jones, a 16-year-old white middle class female, but "victim"). This prevents personal connections from being made between victim and audience therefore causing a lack of empathy for the victim, which often leads to victim blame. Just as advertisements "objectify" and "dehumanize" women, newspapers tend to do the same- and it's usually not a conscious effort.
"As history has taught us, accepting and even engaging in violence is made much easier when the victims are dehumanized, depersonalized, and objectified. Lack of personal information about victims in general, and about female victims in particular, may help to "normalize" violence against women and impede progress towards reducing such violence" (Anastasio and Costa 541).
This is part of the desensitized society in which we live. It takes far too much to even influence a reaction in people especially concerning women's issues. Rape and violence against women has become so common, even the media is enforcing this notion of "normalcy".

In the study, after college students (who were women, by the way) read the articles, a majority of those surveyed laid blame on the female victim (especially in cases of rape and domestic violence). Blame was placed due to the "clothing" the victim wore insisting the victim was "asking for it" or "said something to upset her husband" in a domestic violence case. These statements were made when the victims personal information was omitted from the articles. However, it should be clarified that as long as the victims personal information was included, regardless of gender, victim blame was not placed and all experienced increased empathy for the victim.

Let's focus on the cultural aspects for a minute. Culture, society, it's all influenced by the media in different ways. Whether it's acknowledged or not, it happens. As mentioned earlier, statements were made blaming the victims.If certain information is omitted, but some description is given, people assume their own biases using what stereotypes and cultural myths they may have learned. This is big problem that most reporters don't even realize they're assisting in. "The news may inadvertently support cultural myths about female victims. For example, a description of the attire of a rape victim may imply that she provoked the attack. Mention of the years of abuse endured by a woman who was murdered by her husband may engender blame for failure to leave the situation earlier. Even the mention of a woman's height and weight, if not within the slender dictates of contemporary attractiveness, may serve to trivialize the horror of victimization" (Anastasio and Costa 536). What may seem like pertinent information to a reporter leaves plenty of room for stereotyping and cultural "norms" to slither in...

So, what should be done? The answer isn't a clear one. The media may be doing it's best to present victims in the best light possible, but not all women want to be known as victims. It's not powerful, it's not liberating. It's smothering. To be known as a victim, for some women, is just plain rude. This is a big reason for keeping names out of the print media. Despite findings in experiments and case studies, ultimately, it comes down to what the woman herself wants people to know. As reporters, I think we have a job, a loyalty, to the victim. This could be debated, but that's what we're all studying in Media Ethics and Law, no? :)

Women are enduring gender violence all the time, and yet it's not always presented in the media. Not even rape cases make it to the news unless someone pertinent is involved, and certainly not every case of domestic violence is documented in the New York Times or on CNN. The representations women get in the media aren't always on their side, or for good cause. Usually, because our society is so desensitized to violence against women, their cases are left out while cases against men seem to be "rare" and make the cuts for articles and news briefs. The fact of the matter is, women need to get out there and let their voices be heard!

There's an event Rutgers hosts each year. Take Back the Night! It's on April 23, 2009 and starts at 7PM in front of Cooper Greens (aka the grass of the FORMER Cooper Dining Hall) and then off to Brower Commons!

Check out the Facebook group for updates!
http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#/event.php?eid=51593483508&ref=ts

In the meantime, I'll try to search for some POSITIVE stories about women taking a stand against gender violence in the media!