The article “Girls’ Bodies, Girls’ Selves: Body Image, Identity, and Sexuality” by Elline Lipkin is an informative article describing how men and women are treated differently in certain scenarios throughout the country. The title of the article suggests that females are having trouble figuring out who they really are with or without the help of media and advertisement. The title also suggests that women are the only ones who suffer from sexual objectification, which is not the case.…
I think it is absolutely revolting that the sexual revolution of the late 1960s and early 1970s placed a double standard on men and women. The double standard implied that females were supposed to be as modest as possible and remain chaste till marriage. In the meantime, standards for boys were merely the opposite. It seemed to be this rule didn't pose for buys, if anything they were being encouraged to not be chaste. Lisa LeClair was attempting to change these rules for women. What really triggered LeClair was the colleges unspoken endorsement to the double standard on rules of girls dormitories. LeClair can even recall being in her dorm by 9:30 and watching her boyfriend walk away into freedom. LeClair states “I can still see the image,”…
The report indicated the girl was dragged from college party to party by male students and repeatedly raped. The report stated the males in the video were not present during the rapes, but it showed the men standing over the girl jokingly making crass and offensive comments about her state of consciousness. The news report without the video would contain the same horrific accounting of the events that occurred. The inclusion of the video with the audio of the comments the men made, perpetuates the objectification of and violence against women and in the media. Sexual and violent exploitation of women permeates the news, television programming, and movies. The media, especially news sources should avoid advancing stereotypical graphic depictions of women being subject to the whims of men. Promoting the stereotype that women are the weaker sex through showing unnecessary videos taken by males lacking human empathy and decency further desensitizes the public in ascertaining appropriate and moral behavior toward…
One’s culture has consistently profiled women throughout time. During the 19th century, Nathaniel Hawthorne’s novel The Scarlet Letter, depicts Hester Prynne as an adulteress and humiliated as punishment by wearing a scarlet letter. Long before social media, language against women’s sexuality has existed. Throughout time it became culturally acceptable to refer women as sexual slurs and afterwards shun and shame them. Because the only punished people were the victims, it created a society that bullies women into thinking they are less than those who claim they are. Consequently, a series of mental breakdowns ensure because of slut-shaming. These include depression, self-loathing, suicide, and long-term repercussions. A society’s language often persecutes a group of people. Specifically, the term “slut” shames women from acknowledging oneself and deliberately accuses them for being worthless than “normal”…
For many, their first comments about a movie star or actress may be, "she is so beautiful" or "I wish I looked like her". Visual media is often the first place young women look and start to believe that they are not up to society's beauty standards. This is often because actresses and models have unrealistic body images. Kilbourne in "The Dangerous Way Ads See Women" displays various ads showing how various visual medias demean young women. Many of these ads give young girls the impression that if you are not physically beautiful, life is going to not be as fulfilling. The ads that Kilbourne shows are a lot harsher than the ads one might see today, one of the ads even saying "If your hair isn't beautiful the rest hardly matters". I believe…
Throughout world, and particularly in mainstream media, women and girls are depicted in a sexualizing manner. I know that this exists because I have grown up in a society that objectifies women and it has had a negative effect on my whole life as well as the lives of all my female friends. Sexual objectification is vicious and it needs to stop because it is harming women everywhere; women are essentialized as sex objects rather than individuals with personalities, thoughts, emotions, and their own desires.…
About-Face tries to change the way that young women and girls view themselves. Additionally, they try to stop the way that women are stereotypically portrayed in the media. Moreover, they take sexist and chauvinist messages about women and girls in the media and turn them into positive and empowering messages to women and girls. About-Face also tries to boost girls’ self-esteem and self-image by promoting self-acceptance and self-love. They also try to educate companies about how harmful certain messages in the media can be when they stereotype women and only promote a certain type of beauty ideal. Furthermore, About-Face are big advocates of media-literacy education for women, girls, and companies. They also offer workshops to help girls improve their self-esteem and their outward image of themselves.…
It is recommended that 15 hours should be allocated for this unit, although patterns of delivery are…
Because Popular culture depicts a “typical” rape as being perpetrated by “sick” or crazy men where the rape is a “sudden, violent attack by a stranger in a deserted, public space, after which the victim is expected to provide evidence of the attach and of her active resistance” (Williams, 1984). This stereotype script frames rapists as strangers and the literature refers to such a description as the “classic” rape scenario (Williams, 1994).…
References: Kaerger, D. A., & Staff, J. (2009). The sexual double standard and adolescent peer acceptance.…
I think you could find a case for a lot of these examinations could relate to these songs, but the one that really stood out to be was the “sexual double standard,” along with “sexual objectification.” The reason for believing this, is because in the song “Dear Future Husband,” Megan Trainor says “Dear future husband, If you wanna get that special lovin’ Tell me I'm beautiful each and every night.” basically saying the only way you’re going to be able to get anything, is if you do that. She is making herself into a sexual object towards her future husband and selling off what he likes, to get what she wants. I personally think reinforce norms within our society. By doing this, she is just doing what culture seems to be “okay with” by not “selling…
Language acts as a catalyst for sexual violence in other ways. On a college campus, sexually degrading terms are used as frequently as a beer bong on game day – excessively and without question. By deeming women sluts, whores or bitches in both sexual and not sexual contexts, our society normalizes patriarchal values and gender inequality. When a woman is called a “slut,” she is dehumanized and objectified – two of the driving forces behind sexual…
Over the years, the question “should parents be concerned about the portrayal of teenage girls in the media?” has become a significant controversial moral issue in society. The portrayal of teenage girls in the media is a controversial moral issue because of the cultural sensitivity and the perceived intrusiveness of the subject. This issue primarily concerns the excessiveness of sexual content and unbecoming images of young women exposed through the media. Needless to say, this question leaves many parents ill at ease. Images, perceived norms and new trends are consistently being set for how young girls and women must look, act, think, and feel in order to be successful and accepted in today’s society. There has been an ongoing debate concerning moral actions that need to be taken to regulate the appropriateness of age sensitive material being permeated throughout the media.…
The age-old double standard of sexuality and gender is a historical and still currently prevalent issue that both male and females both face, though one more than the other. A double standard, as defined by Merriam Webster, is a set of principles that apples differently and usually more rigorously to one group of people or circumstances than to another. It is clearly evident that there are double standards within the sexes regarding sexuality. Women are ridiculed, shamed, and stigmatized for being sexual beings, whereas men are praised, revered, and commended for being sexual beings.…
The sexual double standard is the idea that men are praised while women are degraded for engaging in the same sexual behaviors. The root cause of this is probably sexism and gender based stereotypes, (Marks and Zaikman 1) which explains…