The sociology of mass media: Representations of gender on the media
1. The Sociology of Mass Media
Representations of Gender in the
Media
2. Introduction
- Throughout the 20th century, and
to a great extent still today,
representations of
gender in the
media reflected (and
caused) the hegemonic reality…
patriarchy
3. Whilst the family is generally
.
seen as primary gendersocialization agent, media plays a
teaching and
reinforcing these cultural
key role in
expectations
4. ACTIVITY: can you think.of some characteristics
of this patriarchy and how it might be
represented in the mass media?
5. .
Men as central to the world of
employment;
responsible
and
breadwinners
household heads; these are all reflected in movies, soap
operas, advertising etc.
9. .
Ambitious
go far in life; and
increasingly, good men should be a “high-achiever” in
Good men should want to
numerous areas e.g. sport, employment, sex life than most women
10. .
Aggressive
never back down
A good man should
from a
physical or emotional challenge, and should be much more eager
to
risk
his safety or reputation than most women
13. .
Femininity as …
Domesticated
A woman’s place is in the home
Cooking and cleaning in the home is the
responsibility of the female members of the
household
15. .
Normal women place a higher value
on personal relationships,
gossip and the latest
fashions than most men
16. .
Subordinate and inferior
As with all the characteristics mentioned,
there are always many exceptions; but women
are most often portrayed as being of slightly less
intrinsic worth than men in most
times, spaces and situations
18. Representations of femininity
Symbolic annihilation (this is the term of Tuchman et al, 1978)
-
Women’s achievements under-reported, condemned, trivialized
-
Women more likely to be presented in a sexualised or infantile manner
19. Tunstall (2000)
-
.
More than 50% of British women are in paid employment; and
we’re seeing continuing progress in the proportion of
leadership positions filled by women
- yet
role as
this is under-rep’d in the media; instead, women’s
mothers, housewives and
consumers is over-rep’d
-
Only around half of all sexual activity involves a woman, yet
women are far more likely to be portrayed in a
sexualised way
20. .
The ‘Just the Women’ report ,2012
-
Study of rep’n of women, and
violence against
women, in British newspapers
-
Part of the Leveson Inquiry (2012), more widely known for its
investigation of
unethical journalistic
activities e.g. phone-hacking
-
For two weeks, 11 national newspapers were subject to a
content analysis: 1,300 reports contained
“sexism”
ACTIVITY: What were some other the findings of Just the Women?
21. .
The ‘Seen but not Heard’ report, 2012
- Random sample of front pages of 18 national
newspapers
- 78% of people mentioned in headlines were male
- 84% of people mentioned in the stories were male
- Very few stories about female expertise or
professionalism; instead, most of the “experts” (e.g.
scientists, psychologists, economists) were male
22. Cochrane (2011): content analysis of BBC productions
.
- 72% of BBC’s Question Time panelists were male
- 92% of guests on BBC’s Mock the Week were male
- 84% of reporters and guests on BBC radio’s Today
programme were male
23. - Males even dominate .
children’s TV; the
Bristol Fawcett Society (2008) found that only
30% of characters on BBC’s CBeebies were
male, ALL narrators were male, and most
presenters were male
ACTIVITY: The Bristol Fawcett Society specialises in studies
using content analysis; can you recall any specific CA studies?
24. .routinely
• Computer games
under-represent women numerically,
and in the way they are
• Women’s
portrayed
sexualisation and
marginalisation is, according to
Ivory (2006), most extreme in this media
format
25.
26. Magazines and femininity
Magazines are a particularly interesting format as
they are even more likely than TV shows and
movies to be aimed at one particular sex e.g.
“women’s magazines”, “Lads’
mags”
Sociologists have long argued that both men’s and
rigid
ideals of masculinity
femininity; playing a key role in
women’s magazines promote very
and
the reproduction of patriarchy
27. The Cult of Femininity?
This term is that of Ferguson (1983)
•
Ferguson (1983) : content anal. of women’s
magazines (e.g. ‘Good Housekeeping’ and
‘Women’s weekly’) from between 1949 and
1980
cult
• A“
of femininity” prevailed;
high value on women attaining
excellence through care, family,
marriage and physical appearance
28. .
Ferguson also looked at current magazines
and found some change; but often this was
superficial and not
equality
a sign of genuine
“him, home and
looking good (for him)”
focus still on
29. .
• The Bristol Fawcett Society (2008) analyzed
front covers of magazines (that featured
people), finding the same prevailing ideals and
images