It’s a Quick Way to Get What You Want”: A Formative Exportation of HIV Risk Among Urban Massachusetts Men Who Have Sex with Men(MSM) Who Attend Sex Parties was an article retrieved from the AIDS Patient Care and STD Journal it was published in October of 2010. The authors of this article are Matthew J. Mimiaga, Sari L. Reisner, Sean Bland, Kevin Cranston, Deborah Isenberg, Maura A. Driscoll, Rodney VanDerwarker, and Kenneth Mayer. The main focus of the research was to investigate the HIV sexual risk behaviors of MSM who reported attending and/or hosting sex parties in Massachusetts in the past 12 months. Men who have sex with men at these sex parties are at greater risk of receiving HIV or an STI due to the fact there are other factors involved like alcohol, drugs, higher mean of anonymous partners, and unprotected sex(Migiaga, 2010). This study took place at the Fenway Health a health care and research facility. There were 40 preselected participants who completed an in depth, semi structured qualitative interview and an interviewer-administered comprehensive quantitative assessment series for a hour and a half. The study/interviews were conducted by one of two trained interviewers. That asked questions like… How would you define a sex party? When did you begin hosting/attending sex parties? Describe the sex parties you attended/hosted? Are condoms and lube available at these parties? What kind of sexual behaviors do men engage in and what HIV and STI risk behavior do you see happening? Do you participate or organize these parties? Any rules involved in your parties? While asking these questions they also assessed psychosocial factors like depression, anxiety, problematic alcohol used and history of drug or alcohol abuse, and the trauma history (like childhood sexual abuse). Results/conclusion of the study suggested that the men who attended these parties are at great risk of…
Many different articles and essays use statistics to back up their claims but you is to say if they are accurate or not? In “Little Girls or Little Women? The Disney Princess Effect” by Stephanie Hanes and “Toddlers in Tiaras” by Skip Hollandsworth they use many different statistics to back up their claims that the media is sexualizing little girls and that it is a problem for themselves and society. Even though they shock you with their disturbing statistics you wouldn’t know if they were correct without some further research.…
Foremost, the film Boys in the Band, is the first major-studio production to deal frankly with homosexuality; a breakthrough film in the gay film genre. This film centers around a birthday party at an apartment in the city, where a group of closely knit friends are invited but a straight man surprisingly arrives, making the already unbearable tension even worse. What starts out as an entertaining evening plummets into a rollercoaster ride of emotion, infused with wit, and self-loathing, where there is humor one minute, and then it nosedives into a few gay friends ripping each other to pieces. At moments I cringed at the screen, then I laughed and I even felt awful. I felt as if the entire time I viewed this film I was doing so as an outsider, out of pure curiosity of the lives homosexual men lead and the awkward situations they encompass. Boys in the Band is directed to the 1970’s society, which at the time was blind to the homosexuality that had been going on around them for decades. It focuses on the ability to place a few dysfunctional people in a room together and force out great and awkward dialogue, and ultimately some characters' "evil" sides. While watching the movie I was astonished by how these men treated each other. For example Harold says, “beware of the hostile fag, when he’s sober he’s dangerous, when he drinks he’s lethal”, to Michael, who organized Harold’s party at his apartment. However, Michael was the bluntest character in the movie, he always spoke his mind (mainly because he was drinking) and at times he would brutally degrade the other men at the party. Even worse, violence is ignited throughout the movie from colliding homosexual personalities and the presence of a straight man at the party. At moments the cruelty of this film, whether physical or verbal abuse, makes you wonder how these men could of been friends before and how could they still be friends after this party. I believe the point of this…
Throughout history, the two sides have created conceptions about the other, and about their sexuality. Whether these conceptions are true or not, this has resulted in stereotyping of “The Other.” Edward…
Sexualisation is to make something sexual in character or quality, or to become aware of sexuality, especially in relation to men and women. Sexualisation is linked to sexual objectification and has been dismissed by some as no more than yet another moral panic about youth and sex. However, it is striking that the term appears to have helped stimulate feminist activism, speaking in some way to the experiences of young people. Building from a history and analysis of the term, there is a proposal that ‘sexualisation’ has served as an interpretive theory of contradictory gender norms, using the figure of the ‘girl’ to gesture towards an intensifying contradiction between the demands that young women display both desirability and innocence. However, there is a concern that the term has facilitated a focus in media and policy texts, which attends less to gender inequity than to sexuality as a poison of young femininity.…
Finding a simple or concrete definition of gender maybe near impossible. Gender roles are what men and woman learn and internalize as the way they are supposed to act. These roles are commonly thought of as natural rather than a construction of culture. Gender is thought to flow from sex, rather then being a matter of what the culture does with sex. This theory is widely and exhaustively debated, according to Wood "Sex is based on biology; Gender is socially and psychologically constructed" (Wood 19). This statement suggests that culture's discourses and ideologies form the complexities of gender and gender roles. It is easy to say that girls are made of sugar and spice and everything nice and boy are made of snips and snails and puppy dog tails, but we are actually more intricate then that.…
Women around the world, from different age groups and cultures share a common problem; they are not happy with their appearances. Most images of ideal beauty imposed by various media devices make women feel that they do not meet the cultural or social standard. "Women are, taught to see their bodies in parts, and to evaluate each part separately. Breasts, feet, hips, waistline, neck, eyes, nose, complexion, hair, and so on-each in turn is submitted to an anxious, fretful, often despairing scrutiny." (Sontag) Women see magazines from cover to cover in which unrealistically beautiful and skinny girls are collaged on ever single page. Body image is greatly affected by the mass media 's portrayal of the thin ideal body type.…
"Multiple O 's: Why One Orgasm Is Never Enough." Cosmopolitan - The Online Women 's Magazine for Fashion, Sex Advice, Dating Tips, and Celebrity News. Web. 22 Nov. 2010. .…
Six time U.S. Open champion. Highest-earning woman athlete of all time. Currently ranked No. 1 in the world. Posed naked on the cover of a magazine and in a bikini for several others, downsized to nothing more than a sexy body. This is the sad reality of this star tennis player, Serena Wiliams, along with many other female athletes in the world today. Sexualization and minimization of female athletes and women’s sports in mass media is an unfortunate trend that continues to occur in the sports world. Especially in sports like tennis and volleyball, the accomplishments…
The best approach to solve the problem of sexualization of girls is through the use of Media Education and Show Talks (MEST) plan. This is attained by the advocacy of developing career oriented girls and women in the society. There are a number of ways this can be achieved but the most compelling and appropriate method that can be applied and produce the desired results is the use of successful women in the business and the corporate world as icons and references. There is a famous saying in the bible that states that iron sharpens iron. This same principle seems to work in many aspects of mankind. For example, sexualization of girls is a problem that has been in existence…
I feel the embarrassment of women in advertising usually focus on women being considered as male sexual objects.…
1. What subtle messages about sex, gender, gender identity and roles, and sexuality were evident in these images?…
Psychological and internally, a person might feel that they are reproductively structured the wrong way because of their physical features assigned at birth and how they the world sees them. Media can be brutal on an individual gender identity, and it can also help the society accept you for who you are; case in point Bruce/Kaitlin Jenner, when the news finally broke out it was a wild wind of crazy frenzy and backlash. Regardless of our personal opinions, the Media helped shed some lights in what in one of the things shunned by the public or considered defective in us, it gives courage to those in the same or similar shoes as Jenner, because of the Media influence on our society set standard expected characteristics from both genders.…
Furthermore, the portrayal of women as objects of sexual desire and pleasure is a pervasive theme in contemporary films (Murphy, 2015). Films such as No Strings Attached and Friends With Benefits, in fact, are predicated on the idea of sexual relationships. These films depict women as highly sexual beings, who – contrary to traditional gender stereotypes – are unaffectionate and aromatic. In essence, these characters possess masculine traits of antipathy towards romance and an unquenchable thirst for sex. This is reflective of the nature of hook-up culture, since hook-ups are grounded in these values of aromanticism and masculinity. For example, as Villa (2016) states, not getting emotionally attached is a rule of hooking up. Why, though, is this important (these films are created for entertainment value, right?) Not entirely! Films have many latent functions and do not simply imitate social interaction – they reify a socio-cultural phenomenon that has specific gender and class implications. That is, media representations are symbols that can impact norms of acceptable sexual behaviour (Stinson…
The media plays a sweeping performance in creating social normalities, due to the many social media outlets. Gender roles exist due to the fact that society chooses to accept them. A great example is how That 70’s Show portrays men and women at the time and you are even able to see how little the pattern has changed from the time period the show is placed and now. The image of gender stereotypical roles in the media depict the difference between a real man and a boy, or what the “Correct” female occupation must be, and women being under-represented and portrayed as having a very limited set of roles in life.…