Expository texts are created to manipulate the audience to accept a certain point of view. In the article “Consumerism”, author Catherine Deveny presents a satirical picture of modern Australia as a greedy and unhappy nation in the grips of a dangerous epidemic of consumerism where citizens excessively spend money to try and alleviate their pain. She suggests that although this behaviour may help the economy, it is detrimental to our spiritual economy. She encourages the audience to support her view through the use of extended metaphors, language devices and appeal to commonly held values.…
Ever since people discovered trade and moved away from self-sufficient model of household, consumption was taking place. Starting as a barter economy of exchanged goods, it changed through years to consumption that no longer concerns only bare necessities of life.…
The picture on page 398 is a great example of sex and advertising. The woman…
The increasingly popular obscenities and nudity are infinitely related to the theory of sex sells. It is used to arouse the interest in a particular product, service or brand. The thought process that we follow our primal urges of food and reproduction has been used in advertising for a long time. However, there is also a fine line that can be stepped over and people can be turned off.…
previously only attainable by the well paid and wealthy. As a result of this, class…
The bad thing is that it will only get worse, if something isnt done about regulating what goes into advertising, then it will just be a mess. With the path that our society is on today, I wouldnt be surprised if one day all of our advertising included some type of sexual theme or behavior. Our society for the most part views these behaviors as normal too; its not that we accept them all, yet, that we are numb to them. I think that I can speak for many people when I say that I usually dont even notice the sexual themes and behaviors that flood advertising. If people were asked how they feel about certain sexual behaviors, such as being promiscuous, etc, they would probably not feel positively about them. Yet, when these behaviors are in the media, it as if we cant do anything about them, so they become the norm.…
Each day we are bombarded with immoral sexuality from a myriad of sources – the television, the radio, music, movies, commercial ads, dating sites, magazines, books, billboards, and the list goes on and on. It seems that there is nearly no place safe…
In the last one hundred years, advertisers and film directors have gotten lazy in their fields. Even the writers and directors of commercials have started to lose their talent. Have you noticed that whatever product you are looking into, from burgers to perfume, scandalously clad models and actresses crowd the shot, while the actual product is touched or used once or twice? This is due to the idea that’s been sweeping the offices of writers everywhere, that “Sex sells”. A lack of moral values has been polluting our television channels and commercials between shows, and it’s gotten to the point that women are so overly sexualizxed a new mother can’t even feed her infant child in public without unnecessary criticism and insults. In this modern…
In the debate over sex education, one thing is undisputed: The average kid today is immersed in sexual imagery. A generation that has grown up on the sordid details of the Starr Report, watched thong-clad teens gyrate on Spring Break cable specials, or read the cover of nearly any women’s magazine in the grocery check-out line is familiar with the facts of life.…
There exists in our society a publicized and politicized concern, perhaps an over-concern, regarding the sexual desires, behaviors, and experiences of the people living in it. While this nation’s media is saturated with explicit marketing campaigns and sexual innuendo, there is a catch. The messages flashed before us every day say: Sex Sells, Be Sexy, Be Feminine Females, Be Masculine Males, Wear Your Sex Well . . . as long as it is normal sex—natural sex. What is natural sex? Heterosexual sex—defined as the union between penis and vagina—and it is the only form of natural sex. Says who? Look around.…
Sexuality is a major part of popular culture. America has made sex both alluring and taboo. Advertisers however know that sex sells. Once again, only the extremes are used. Commercials and ads use models to promote; women with tan skin, white teeth, big eyes, and large breasts. Men buy things when an attractive woman is telling them to, and the reverse is true for women. These advertising everywhere from television, to the internet, to magazines. This is very detrimental to society, because it promotes objectification of sexuality and both genders. Camel cigarettes, for example use an appealing woman as an object to sell another object. The model is no longer a woman, and she’s only as valuable as what she is selling. People buying the product support all of this, and the cycle never changes.…
Today, with the technology available, people are easily connected to the media whether it is for the news, the season premiere of an upcoming televised series, or the recent release of a video from a YouTube producer. Along with the mainstream media, people are flooded with hidden messages and exposed to unwanted materials. The modern American culture is based on the contents of media and is recycled through a process of demands and contributions. As a result, the American culture is exposed to a steady increase of sexualization within mainstream media, especially the hyper-sexualization of women (Task Force, 4). The American culture is exposing future generations to a world where sex is mainstream and popularized. Through the social learning…
The first and most important avenue to be used is the media society. Media is one avenue that has perpetuated and magnified the problem of sexualization of girls through advertisements, music, videos and television and radio shows that portray the celebrities and popular women in the society as sexualized stereotypes (Curry & Choate, 2010). Most of them dress inappropriately in order to impress men audience since this culture of sexualization of girls and women has been an avenue for popularity and famousness. The media should then turn around and enforce policies that prohibit commercial advertisement of any kind that portrays sexualization of girls. The policies should also employ the fact that no popular woman entity should be put on air waves in the name of shows if they are dressed appropriately or in the manner that do not depict them as sexualized objects. Additionally, the media fraternity should also come up with regulations that control the content that is aired in their channels through music and video shows. This regulation should entail the banning of playing music where women are depicted dancing half-naked or sometimes fully naked entertaining their male counterparts. If this is put in place, young girls will not be able to access the sexualized messages and information that teaches them to value how they look rather than what they can…
A study by the American Psychological Association reported that “throughout U.S. culture, and particularly in mainstream media, women and girls are depicted in a sexualizing manner” ("Report of the APA Task Force on the Sexualization of Girls" 4). These elements of media ingrain ideas of female inferiority, which could be one of the reasons why one in five women will be raped at one point of their life, yet only one in seventy-one males will be raped ("Statistics About Sexual Violence"). Though there are many reasons for why sexual assault might occur, the sexualization of females in the media has a large influence. Females are depicted as tools for sex in popular songs and are shown in scandalous clothing in pictures and advertisements shown across America. Authors of the “Report of the APA Task Force on the Sexualization of Girls” discovered that in the advertisements of two popular men’s magazines “80.5% of the women were depicted as sex objects” due to their sexual positioning in the photo or the lack of clothes (7) . In these photograph advertisements, 4 out of 5 women were “suggestively dressed, partially clad, or nude” (“Report of the APA Task Force on the Sexualization of Girls” 7). This type of media subliminally encourages sexual motivation in men because in modern media “sex is portrayed as a commodity whose attainment is the ultimate male challenge” (Curtis).…
Sexualization can be defined as 'when a person’s value comes only from his or her sexual appeal or behaviour, to the exclusion of other characteristics' or in simpler terms ' when a person is portrayed purely as a sex object. This shockingly, is what is happening in this day and age, and even more shockingly, to your younger sisters, cousins, relatives or even friends. It’s called the sexualization of children. Many Australians have already voiced their concern that children’s freedom to develop at their own pace and in their own ways is under threat from heavily sexualised advertising and marketing, and the influence of parents.…