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Collective identity and gender

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Title: Collective identity and gender


1
Collective identity and gender
  • How do lifestyle magazines create a collective
    identity of gender?
  • (of their readers and for their readers)

2
We will be focusing on
  • Collective gender identity in lifestyle
    magazines Glamour, Cosmopolitan, Nuts and men's
    health
  • Using the adverts within the magazines as an
    example of the second media.
  • How do the adverts themselves reinforce a gender
    identity?

3
In the exam you will have the choice of two
questions
  • Question one will usually discuss to what
    extent/ how far/ have an opinion or take a view
  • Question two will usually discuss explain how
    something operates/ explain/respond to a quote or
    a statement.
  • Marking
  • Explanation/ analysis/argument (20 marks)
  • Use of examples (20 marks)
  • Use of terminology (10 marks)

4
Examples of questions
  • Media and Collective Identity
  • Discuss the contemporary representation of a
    nation, region or social group in the media,
    using specific textual examples from at least two
    media to support your answer.
  • How far does the representation of a particular
    social group change over time ? Refer to at least
    two media in your answer.

5
Key questions to ask
  • How do the media form an identity for a group of
    people?
  • What is the impact when that identity is
    negative?
  • How do the media portray this identity as
    negative?
  • Does the audience take the identity as a truth
    rather than recognise it as a stereotype?
  • How does the dominant ideology/ collective
    identity spread?
  • Are all the depictions in the media negative?
  • Should collective identity exist in our modern
    world?

6
Prompt questions
  • How do contemporary media represent nations
    regions and ethic/social/collective groups of
    people?
  • How do contemporary representations compare to
    previous time periods
  • What are the social implications of different
    media representations of groups of people?
  • To what extent is human identity increasingly
    mediated?
  • How media that are in public circulation now
    represent groups of people in different ways
  • The effects in society of particular kinds of
    media representation of collective identities
  • Debates around the idea that our identities are
    increasingly constructed by or through or in
    response to the media (and arguments against this
    notion)

7
So what is gender?
  • Gender- It is important to understand gender as
    different from sexuality. Sexuality concerns
    physical and biological differences that
    distinguish males from females. Cultures
    construct differences in gender
  • See gender handout
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vYIwWS2atEmcfeature
    related

8
Anthony Giddens
  • The mainstream and mass media have historically
    played a pivotal role in shaping how girls think
    and feel about their bodies, their lives and
    their ambitions. The creation of a coherent
    self-identity is a process that is universal
    (Giddens),
  • Consumerism is one of the clearest ways in which
    we develop and project a lifestyle

9
Key themes of Giddens
  • Gidden allows us to consider how people form
    their sense of self identity
  • Anthony Giddens focuses on how we create and
    shape our identity in modern societies and how
    the media might feed into this.
  • The fusion of individual actions and grand social
    forces in one theoretical approach
    (Structuration)
  • The impact of late modernity where all activity
    is the subject of social reflection, on social
    actors, relationships and institutions
  • Some other interests such as globalisation, the
    state and politics are less of an interest to us

10
  • Suggests that we understand rules of society even
    though they may not be written down or formally
    enforced, if people go against these social
    expectations, people may be shocked
  • In terms of gender, this form of social
    reproduction When a boy wears make up, the
    punishments comes through in things like teasing-
    up holding what we expect to be the rules of
    society
  • Women who choose not to shave their armpits may
    also be treated as deviants for ignoring a social
    convention about feminine appearance
  • Peoples everyday actions therefore reinforce and
    reproduce a set of expectations and it is this
    set of other peoples expectations which make up
    the social forces and social structures (Macro)
  • Society only has form and that form only has its
    effects on people in so far as structure is
    produced and reproduced in what people do.
  • He says that people have faith in the coherence
    of everyday life. We could say that this is why
    some men get angered when they see other men
    acting in an effeminate manner- This behaviour
    challenges their everyday understanding of how
    things should be in the world
  • This suggests that gender is something that is
    learned and policed and which has to be
    constantly worked on and monitored

11
The theory of structuration
  • Human agency (micro level activity) and social
    structure (macro level forces) continuously feed
    into each other. The social structure is
    reproduced through repetition of acts by
    individual people and can therefore change
  • He notes that this theory suggests that social
    life is more random than individual acts but is
    not merely depicted by social forces. it is not
    merely a mass of micro acts but you cant
    understand it by just looking at the macro.
    Instead micro (human) and macro (social
    structure) are in a relationship with each other
    which reproduces the structure
  • This means there is a social structure-
    traditions, institutions, moral codes and
    established ways of doing things, but it also
    means that these can be changed when people start
    to ignore them, replace them or reproduce them
    differently

12
Modernity?
  • The word tradition comes from the Latin
    traditionem, acc. of traditio which means
    "handing over, passing on", and is used in a
    number of ways in the English language
  • Beliefs or customs taught by one generation to
    the next, often orally. For example, we can speak
    of the tradition of sending birth announcements.
    A set of customs or practices. For example, we
    can speak of Christmas traditions.
  • Modernity typically denotes "a post-traditional,
    post-medieval historical period", in particular,
    one marked by progress from agrarianism via the
    rise of industrialism, capitalism, the
    nation-state, and its constituent forms of
    surveillance (Barker 2005, 444).
  • Conceptually, modernity is related to the modern
    era and to modernism, but is a discrete concept.
    I
  • n context, modernity can denote association with
    cultural and intellectual movements occurred
    between 1436 and 1789 (for some thinkers until
    1895), and extending to the 1970s, or later
    (Toulmin 1992, 35).
  • Postmodernity (also spelled post-modernity or
    termed the postmodern condition) is generally
    used to describe the economic and/or cultural
    state or condition of society which is said to
    exist after modernity. This is the stage we are
    said to be in now

13
  • When tradition dominates individual actions do
    not have to be analysed and thought about so much
    because choices are already predescribed by
    traditions and customs
  • In post traditional times (modernity) we dont
    really worry about the traditions from the past
    and options are at least as open the law and
    public opinion will allow. All questions of how
    to behave in society then becomes an issue of how
    we need have to consider and make decisions
    about.
  • Modernity is post traditional. A society cant be
    fully modern if attitudes, actions or
    institutions are significantly influenced by
    traditions.
  • He suggests that self identity is inescapable in
    a modern society

14
Feature of late modernity
  • Gidden argues we are not in a time of post
    modernism, we are in a time of late modernity.
    Its modernity, just with bells on pre modern
    (traditional culture) modern (post traditional)
    culture post modern (extreme cases of fully
    developed modernity)
  • The self is not something we are born with, and
    it is not fixed
  • Instead, the self is reflexively made-
    thoughtfully constructed by the individual
  • We all choose a lifestyle
  • Relationships are increasingly like the pure
    relationship of equals, where everything has to
    be negotiated and there are no external reasons
    for being together
  • We accept that all knowledge is provisional and
    may be proved wrong in the future
  • We need trust in everyday life and relationships
    or wed be paralysed by thoughts of unhappy
    possibilities
  • We accept risks and choose possible future
    actions by anticipating outcomes. The media adds
    to our awareness of risks

15
Anthony Giddens- Modernity and self identity
  • Modernity and the self
  • Change at every level
  • Media and the self
  • The reflexive project of the self
  • How would you sum up in Giddens points in terms
    of gender identity?

16
Key ideas to reconsider
  • Ideology
  • Semiotics
  • Preferred/ secondary meanings
  • Representation
  • Macro
  • Micro

17
Uses and gratifications
  • Diversion- escape from everyday life
  • Personal relationships
  • Personal identity
  • Surveillance
  • Information/learning/personal identity/integration
    and social interaction/ entertainment

18
Key terms
  • Gender- It is important to understand gender as
    different from sexuality. Sexuality concerns
    physical and biological differences that
    distinguish males from females. Cultures
    construct differences in gender

19
Key terms
  • Patriarchy- A male dominated order that expounds
    masculine values and excludes women from
    positions of power and authority
  • it is a sociological way of saying that our
    civilization is pervasively patriarchal (men hold
    the power, women are secondary) which is based
    on bias in power based on the socially
    constructed concepts of gender rooted in
    historical premises.
  • Patriarchy is a key concept in Marxist and
    socialist feminism
  • from the biological (women are weaker) to the
    economic (women provide domestic support for the
    working male, and/or a cheap army of reserve
    labour) to the cultural (masculinity and
    traditional masculine skills are valued above
    femininity and traditionally female skills)
  • Scopophilia- Pleasure of looking

20
Stuart Hall
  • Reception theory provides a means of
    understanding media texts by understanding how
    these texts are read by audiences.
  • Theorists who analyze media through reception
    studies are concerned with the experience of
    cinema and television viewing for spectators, and
    how meaning is created through that experience.
  • An important concept of reception theory is that
    the media textthe individual movie or television
    programhas no inherent meaning in and of itself.
    Instead, meaning is created in the interaction
    between spectator and text in other words,
    meaning is created as the viewer watches and
    processes the film.
  • Reception theory argues that contextual factors,
    more than textual ones, influence the way the
    spectator views the film or television program.

21
Stuart Hall
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vaTzMsPqssOYfeature
    player_embeddedat63
  • See Staurt Hall handout

22
  • Contextual factors include elements of the
    viewer's identity as well as circumstances of
    exhibition, the spectator's preconceived notions
    concerning the film or television program's genre
    and production, and even broad social,
    historical, and political issues. In short,
    reception theory places the viewer in context,
    taking into account all of the various factors
    that might influence how she or he will read and
    create meaning from the text

23
Stuart Halls Encoding/decoding model (1973)
  • Suggest that a media producer may encode a
    certain meaning into their text which would be
    based on a certain social context and
    understandings but noted that when another person
    comes to consume that text, their decoding of
    it, based on their own social context and
    assumptions, is likely to be somewhat different.

24
Reception theory
  • Reception theory- based on the idea that no text
    has one single meaning
  • We decode the texts we encounter in individual
    ways
  • David Morley- he said there are three main types
    of reading for any media text
  • Dominant (hegemonic)- the reader shares the
    programmes codes and accepts the preferred
    reading
  • Negotiated reading- the reader partly shares the
    programmes codes but modifies it in a way which
    reflects their position and interests
  • Oppositional (counter hegemonic) the reader does
    not share the programmes code and rejects the
    preferred reading bringing an alternative frame
    of interpretation e.g a feminist reading of a
    lads mag.

25
Reception theory
  • Focuses entirely on what users / consumers /
    audiences do with media texts
  • Argues that meaning lies in the hands of the
    readers
  • Elvis Costello You can only control what the
    words look like, not what they mean
  • John Fiske audiences / consumers act as
    semiotic guerillas who configure their own
    meanings from the texts produced by media
    institutions
  • Consider how people can react differently to the
    same stimulus different people have different
    tastes in what is funny / disgusting , acceptable
    / unacceptable, as the recent furore about
    Russell Brand and Jonathan Ross shows
  • Web 2.0 and the melting of the line between
    producers and audiences the age of YouTube and
    post-modern mash up culture and blogs and the
    anti-journalists who work outside the system
    and outside the rules audiences are the masters
    now

26
Thursday 11th
  • To understand the concepts of Feminism
  • To look at Judith Butler and gender trouble
  • To understand other key theorists
  • Handouts- Judith Butler essay, Queer theory
    Chapter, Feminism chapter

27
Feminism
  • Feminist media theory can be described as an
    unconditional focus on analysing gender as a
    mechanism that structures material and symbolic
    worlds and our experiences of them
  • First wave feminism- refers to early feminists
    including the suffrage movement that fought to
    secure the vote for women
  • Second wave feminism 1960s including the
    women's movement which campaigned for equal
    rights in employment, marital relationships and
    sexual orientation- During this period, women
    wanted to challenge the dominant ideological
    definitions of femininity
  • See handouts

28
Judith Butler
  • Argues that sex (Male/ female) is seen to cause
    gender (Masculine/feminine) which is seen to
    cause desire towards the other gender. Her
    approach inspired partly by Foucault is
    basically to smash the supposed links between
    these so that gender and desire are flexible,
    free floating and not caused by other factors
  • Butler says there is no gender identity behind
    the expressions of gender.identity is
    performitively constructed by the very
    expressions which are said to be its result .
    Gender is a performance, its what you do, rather
    than who you are
  • Argues that we all put on a gender performance,
    whether traditional or not.
  • Her book gender trouble argues that gender
    identities are not fixed rather they are only
    given meaning when acted out or preformed.
  • She shares Simone de Beauviours view that one is
    not born, but rather becomes a woman

29
Judith Butler
  • Developed Foucault's work on sexuality with her
    own original contribution.
  • The acts by which gender is constituted bear
    similarities the per formative acts within
    theatrical contexts
  • Gender is a performance and how it is performed
    constitutes what it means to any given society or
    culture in a particular historical moment
  • Although gender is a process of acting out rather
    than being, it is nevertheless subject to social
    norms and conditions which restrict the range of
    gender performances it is feasible for
    individuals to enact.
  • Gender play is not free for all
  • The way we view sex and gender is fundamental to
    the conventional roles attached to gender. She
    suggests that until sex differences are
    disregarded and people cease to be classed into
    either male or female, true equality is
    impossible.
  • See Judith Butler essay

30
Queer theory See handouts
  • What is Queer Theory?
  • Queer theory is a set of ideas based around the
    idea that identities are not fixed and do not
    determine who we are. It suggests that it is
    meaningless to talk in general about 'women' or
    any other group, as identities consist of so many
    elements that to assume that people can be seen
    collectively on the basis of one shared
    characteristic is wrong. Indeed, it proposes that
    we deliberately challenge all notions of fixed
    identity, in varied and non-predictable ways.
  • Queer theory is based, in part,on the work of
    Judith Butler(in particular her bookGender
    Trouble, 1990).
  • It is a mistake to think that queer theory is
    another name for lesbian and gay studies.

31
Angela McRobbie
  • McRobbie has suggested that teenage magazines
    construct a conservative ideology of femininity
    (looking at magazines like Jackie)
  • Suggested that these magazines didnt allow the
    readers to act against patriarchal social order.
    Instead it promoted values of gentility and
    domesticity
  • She said this was due to several issues
  • The code of romance pervades most articles in the
    magazine especially in the short stories which
    showed
  • The girl has to fight to get and keep her man
  • She can never trust another women unless she is
    old or ugly
  • Despite these trials, being a girl and romance
    are fun (2000)
  • She also suggests that there is a tendency to
    encourage readers to conform to the norm- what
    society expects
  • The code of fashion and beauty

32
Janice Winship
  • Aspirational feminism advocated by women's
    magazines such as Cosmopolitan
  • Says there is the ideology of individual success
    and competiveness in the magazines I rather
    than we
  • To both Winship and McRobbie, success means the
    achievement of romantic attachments rather than
    career or educational achievements

33
Laura Mulvey- The male gaze
  • Argued that the pleasures of cinema is
    Scopophilia- the pleasure of looking a
    voyeuristic gaze directed at other people. She
    also suggests that pleasure is gained by seeing
    oneself as the primary character and identifying
    with them.
  • In a world ordered by sexual imbalance, pleasure
    in looking is split between active/male and
    passive/female. The determining male gaze
    projects its fantasy onto the female figure
    which is styled accordingly.
  • Mulvey suggested that in their typical
    traditional exhibitionist role, women are
    simultaneously looked at and displayed with their
    appearance coded for strong visual and erotic
    impact so that they can be said to connote
    to-be-looked-at-ness
  • Male viewers identify with the male protagonist,
    and the females are the subject of their desiring
    gaze.
  • It also means that the female viewers have to
    take on the viewpoint of the central male
    character so that women are denied a viewpoint
    and of their own and instead participate in the
    pleasure of men looking at women.

34
The male gaze
  • Female characters only have importance in the
    film apart from as an erotic figure both to the
    males in the film and the spectators in the
    cinema.
  • Her role is to drive the hero to act the way he
    does. Male viewers would not want the male hero
    as a sexual object according to the principles of
    the ruling ideology.
  • He instead is meant to be admired as an ideal
    version of the self.
  • Within her model, the audience, both female is
    positioned so that they admire the male lead for
    his actions and adopt his romantic/ erotic view
    of the women.
  • This model denies the heterosexual female gaze
    altogether
  • However it could be said Mulveys dark and
    suffocating anaylsis of patriarchal cinema has
    lost ground to a more confident and empowering
    approach which foregrounds the possibilities of
    subversive that is, non patriarchal modes of
    female spectatorship

35
Using the magazine covers discuss
  • How Laura Mulveys male gaze theory could be
    applied?
  • Discuss the impact for the male and female reader
    if the male gaze theory is applied
  • Using the three types of reading in reception
    theory, discuss what they readings for these
    front covers are.

36
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40
Fiske and audience power
  • John Fiske suggests that popular culture is made
    by the people not produced by the culture
    industry. (1989)
  • It is a step further from Stuart Halls
    encoding/decoding model
  • Fiske suggests the power of the audience to
    interpret media texts and determine their
    popularity, far outweighs the ability of media
    institutions to send a particular message or
    ideology to audiences within their texts
  • He suggests that we cant even talk about the
    people or the audience because a singular mass of
    consumers does not exist there is only a range
    of different individuals with their own changing
    tastes.
  • He suggests that people are not merely consumers
    of texts, the audience rejects this role and
    becomes a producer, a producer of meanings and
    pleasures (1989)
  • This is similar to the concept that WEB 2.0 is
    turning audiences into producers of their own
    media.

41
  • Fiske also says that everyday media users snatch
    aspects of the mass produced media and then
    (re)interpret them to suit their own preferred
    meanings. The text is a source from which the
    viewer activates meaning to make sense of their
    material existence
  • He says that the meaning of a text is not
    complete until interpreted by an individual
    within the context of their lives
  • He uses Madonna as an example in his work he
    said Madonna's image then becomes a site of
    semiotic struggle between the forces of
    patriarchal control and feminine resistance.
  • He also says she contains the patriarchal
    meanings of feminine sexuality and the resisting
    ones that her sexuality is hers to use as she
    wishes
  • Perhaps in terms of collective feminine identity,
    women are also shown this idea

42
Foucault
  • We often talk about people as if they have
    particular attributes as 'things' inside
    themselves -- they have an identity, for example,
    and we believe that at the heart of a person
    there is a fixed and true identity or character
    (even if we're not sure that we know quite what
    that is, for a particular person). We assume that
    people have an inner essence -- qualities beneath
    the surface which determine who that person
    really 'is'. We also say that some people have
    (different levels of) power which means that they
    are more (or less) able to achieve what they want
    in their relationships with others, and society
    as a whole.

43
Foucault- constant changing ideas
  • Foucault rejected this view. For Foucault, people
    do not have a 'real' identity within themselves
    that's just a way of talking about the self -- a
    discourse. An 'identity' is communicated to
    others in your interactions with them, but this
    is not a fixed thing within a person. It is a
    shifting, temporary construction.
  • People do not 'have' power implicitly rather,
    power is a technique or action which individuals
    can engage in. Power is not possessed it is
    exercised. And where there is power, there is
    always also resistance.

44
  • Foucault developed different approaches for his
    different studies, but his work can be
    simplistically divided into 'early' Foucault,
    where he worked on the ways in which state power
    and discourses worked to constrain people
  • 'later in which that idea of power as a 'thing'
    is broken down, and it is instead seen as a more
    fluid relation, a 'technique' which can be
    deployed.

45
Althusser and Interpellation
  • Althusser proposed that individuals are
    transformed into subjects through the ideological
    mechanism of interpellation (Chandler 181).
  • He explained that interpellation works primarily
    through language and occurs when we are hailed by
    a message.
  • To illustrate hailing in the most straight
    forward way, Althusser offered the following
    example when a policeman calls out, Hey, you
    there!, most people within hearing distance will
    immediately assume that they are the ones being
    summoned, even if they have done nothing wrong.
  • This reaction positions the individual as a
    subject in relation to the general ideological
    codes of law and criminality (Brooker 122).

46
  • Althusser believed that the dominant beliefs,
    values and practices that constitute ideology
    serve a political function.
  • As we progress through the education system and
    enter the workforce, ideology works through state
    institutions to interpellate or construct us into
    particular subject positions in which our work
    and lifestyle benefits those who control the
    processes of production (Smith 208).
  • The subject positions which are most prevalent
    configure us in terms of commercial culture - as
    consumers, taxpayers, employees, automobile
    drivers, homeowners, or parents.
  • For instance, come election time, politicians
    continuously address their audience in their
    speeches as voters or taxpayers, thereby
    referring to the subject positions which most
    benefit them in their capacity as political
    leaders.

47
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48
How do life style magazines construct a
collective gender identity?
  • Key questions to consider
  • How do these magazines create a collective
    identity of gender for their readers
  • What do these magazines say about the gender?
  • How do they construct them?
  • How do each of these magazines create gender for
    their readers and create gender of the opposite
    sex?
  • Basically you will have so much information to
    help you answer the question!

49
Key prompts from the specification
  • How do contemporary media represent nations
    regions and ethic/social/collective groups of
    people?
  • How do contemporary representations compare to
    previous time periods
  • What are the social implications of different
    media representations of groups of people?
  • To what extent is human identity increasingly
    mediated?
  • How media that are in public circulation now
    represent groups of people in different ways
  • The effects in society of particular kinds of
    media representation of collective identities
  • Debates around the idea that our identities are
    increasingly constructed by or through or in
    response to the media (and arguments against this
    notion)

50
What are the social implications of different
media representations of groups of people?
  • Stereotyping? What is the impact?
  • What power does the audience have to resist?
  • How do we measure the representations we
    encounter? (think theories)
  • How do we measure up against the re-presentations
    we encounter?

51
To what extent is human identity increasingly
mediated?
  • Increasing media increasingly mediated?
  • Re-presentation by others and ourselves

52
How do contemporary representations compare to
previous time periods?
  • Today- Sexualisation?
  • Past- Patriarchal?
  • Feminism?
  • Similarities and differences
  • Use clear examples from the past

53
Examples of questions
  • Analyse the ways in which the media represent one
    group of people you have studied
  • The media do not construct identity, they merely
    reflect it. Discuss

54
Answering the question
  • Know your case study
  • Keep hunting out your own examples
  • Adapt them to the question
  • Look at both sides of the argument
  • Refer to critics/theorists

55
Representations of gender in the past
  • Gauntlett- Media, gender and identity
  • Patriarchal ideas
  • Women as the happy housewife heroine
  • Women with careers as a masculinisation
  • Working until marriage and children
  • Fulfilling expected gender roles
  • Male editors constructing the female identity
  • Magazines Clearly identifying the role for women

56
Cosmo (past)
  • Winship- inside women's magazine book-although
    feminist ideas, admitted that she enjoyed female
    magazines
  • mixed messages to women, lack of consistent ideas
  • Ideas always followed the norm- e.g hetrosexual
    relationships

57
Magazines and postmodernism
  • Media theorists say that belonging to a
    collective group is a misrecognition
  • Instead we should approach it in a triangular
    approach

How does a magazine represent its own gender to
another gender?
How does it represent the other gender to its
reader?
How does it represent its own gender to the
reader?
58
Postmodernism
  • We are not considering the way that magazines are
    constructed is post modernism
  • Instead we are considering whether a secondary
    audience might create post modern readings of
    these products
  • Pick and mix our media, select how we form our
    identities in relation to the media
  • Gauntlett- Need to be constructed and negotiated
    in a post traditional society/ Magazines allow
    readers to check is this ok?
  • Relavatism- A realist position nothing has any
    meaning anymore, people will create their own
    meaning.
  • It would mean that there was no harm in making a
    gender specific statement in magazines- readers
    are given more credit than to just accept this
    idea- Pick and mix reader
  • We can not assume that people are simply
    influenced
  • A feminist perspective would view the way that
    men and womens
  • Mags present women/female gender as objects,
    decorative, subordinate. They might view the post
    modern ideas with concern as they may appear too
    relaxed

59
David Gauntlett Women's magazines and female
identities today
  • See chapter handouts
  • What has Gauntlett suggested about magazines
    today?
  • Women's magazines are of course, all about the
    social construction of womanhood today
  • Gauntlett- Relationships pg 190 (past or present
    idea?)
  • In general, womens magazines speak the language
    of popular feminism- Assertive, seeking success
    in work and relationships and demanding the right
    to both equality and pleasure. Do you agree?
  • The pick and mix reader pg 196 (as discussed in
    postmodernism and magazines slide
  • Think about some research into real women and ask
    them about what they think about our key
    publications-What do they reveal about gender
    assumptions with women today.
  • Womens magazines offer a confusing and
    contradictory set of ideas
  • Many of the messages are positive- Assertive,
    independent
  • Looking beautiful, generally inescapable
  • Overemphasising the power of the text and
    underestimating the ability of the reader
  • However we could still be absorbing ideas about
    society (through the magazine)
  • Some examples of feminism/ however contradicting
    ideas

60
Looking at the magazines
  • Using Gauntletts chapter key questions to ask
  • Is the goal the same but the path different?
  • Women as the ones doing the seeking?
  • Are they showing that women should be in control?
    What articles reveal this?
  • Does this reflect a shift in power?
  • Do they make us feel bad about ourselves?-
    unachievable goals?-What articles/adverts do
    this?
  • Are magazines giving us the tools for emotional
    and physical health, only to break them down
    again?
  • Contradicting ideas? What are they and what
    themes?
  • Are there examples of positive and empowering
    articles?
  • What are we using it for? Uses and
    gratifications- What would actually learn?
  • Am I using it as a measuring tool for my own
    identity?
  • Is it making me feel better/worse about my life?
  • Do they promote feminism?
  • As a reader, what do we come away with?

61
Identity
  • The pleasure and perhaps sometimes a certain
    sadness of consuming these magazines, is the gap
    between the fantasy of self indulgent luxury and
    the more complex, grittier reality of my life
  • Is there a difference between the reality and the
    fantasy of magazine life?

62
The ideal women
  • Independent in attitude
  • Attractive in looks
  • Looking for/ have a man
  • Career minded
  • Sexy, beautiful, Intelligent, Superwoman
  • Is she being presented as someone who is secure?
    Or are the magazines playing up to these
    insecurities?

63
Oppositional readings
  • Are they harmful?
  • Do they make question every aspect of your life?
  • Are women creating unachievable, stereotyped,
    patriarchal ideas of what it means to be a woman?
  • Women telling women how to be, yet claiming to be
    some kind of sisterhood- Cosmo factor- Women
    against other women- Competitiveness, it is I not
    we (Winship)
  • Creating contradicting ideas for ourselves
  • We are led to believe men are very different from
    us, (Very stereotype)
  • How does the magazine portray the male sex?
  • Is it a patriarchal idea? Does it fulfil dominant
    ideologies of the male gender?
  • Do they make women believe that they are better
    than men and that need looking after by us, but
    that we must not let men know this?
  • Makes men look emotionally immature and
    incapable?

64
Cosmopolitan media pack
  • What does the media pack reveal about the women
    who reads it
  • (see media pack)

65
Cosmo
  • The word cosmopolitan means worldly and
  • knowing. This carefully chosen title carries
    connotations and a mode of address which
    associates its readers and brand image with a
    modern and sophisticated lifestyle and image.

66
  • Sex is a popular sell line for
  • targeting both genders. On
  • the cover the word appears
  • often.
  • Examples of sensational
  • language include the titles
  • of feature articles displayed
  • such as Sex uncensored
  • and a Chick Behaviour
  • that Baffles the Hell Out
  • of Guys. Additionally
  • there is striking use of
  • alliteration the repetition
  • of sounds such as the sss in
  • sex and censored and the
  • b sound in behaviour and
  • baffles makes the words
  • easier to skim read and
  • remember.
  • The often large central image
  • is carefully constructed to target its
  • market of fun, fearless
  • females in a number of
  • ways. The Model often has
  • adopted a pose which is
  • open and uninhibited,
  • signifying fearlessness
  • and confidence.
  • Secondly the often smiling facial
  • expression and direct gaze
  • at the reader communicates
  • a positive and fun attitude
  • to life.

67
We will be focusing on
68
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69
  • We will be discussing
  • The past
  • The present
  • The future
  • The essay will be mainly on the present but we
    must discuss the past and present at least once
    in the essay

70
  • When I was born, they looked at me and said
    'What a good boy, what a smart boy, what a strong
    boy!' And when you were born, they looked at you
    and said 'What a good girl, what a smart girl,
    what a pretty girl!'"

71
How the Media Define Masculinity
  • Families, friends, teachers, and community
    leaders all play a role in helping boys define
    what it means to be a man. Mainstream media
    representations also play a role in reinforcing
    ideas about what it means to be a "real" man in
    our society. In most media portrayals, male
    characters are rewarded for self-control and the
    control of others, aggression and violence,
    financial independence, and physical
    desirability.
  • In 1999, Children Now, a California-based
    organization that examines the impact of media on
    children and youth, released a report entitled
    Boys to Men Media Messages About Masculinity.
    The report argues that the medias portrayal of
    men tends to reinforce mens social dominance.

72
  • The report observes that
  • the majority of male characters in media are
    heterosexual
  • male characters are more often associated with
    the public sphere of work, rather than the
    private sphere of the home, and issues and
    problems related to work are more significant
    than personal issues
  • non-white male characters are more likely to
    experience personal problems and are more likely
    to use physical aggression or violence to solve
    those problems
  • Children Now conclude that these dominant trends
    in the medias portrayal of men reinforce and
    support social attitudes that link masculinity to
    power, dominance and control.
  • In Tough Guise Violence, Media and the Crisis in
    Masculinity, Jackson Katz and Jeremy Earp argue
    that the media provide an important perspective
    on social attitudesand that while the media are
    not the cause of violent behaviour in men and
    boys, they do portray male violence as a normal
    expression of masculinity

73
Men's Magazines and the Construction of
Masculinity
  • Although most contemporary research on the
    portrayal of masculinity in the media has focused
    on violence, research has also begun to examine
    the portrayal of masculinity in mens magazines
    such as Playboy, Maxim, GQ, and Esquire. These
    magazines, which focus on matters such as health,
    fashion, sex, relationships, and lifestyle, play
    a part in defining what it means to be a modern
    man.
  • Some critics argue that these magazines represent
    an improvement in media portrayals of gender
    since they focus on topics previously thought to
    be solely the concern of women. But others argue
    that such magazines still rely on stereotypical
    portrayals of men and masculinity, featuring
    handsome, white, well-built and well-dressed men,
    interested only in acquiring the finer things in
    life.
  • Media commentators argue that these magazines
    continue to relegate women to the background and,
    in doing so, are examples of social backlash
    directed against specific gains made by women in
    the paid labour force, mass media industries and
    other professions. They say that it is no
    coincidence that as women are achieving greater
    social, political and professional equality,
    these magazines symbolically relegate them to
    subordinate positions as sex objects.

74
  • While magazines such as Playboy and Maxim are
    criticized for objectifying womens bodies,
    recent discussions about mens magazines are
    focusing on what these magazines say about men
    and masculinity. Academics argue that the recent
    popularity of these magazines is a reflection of
    mens uncertainty over the roles they are
    expected to assume in society, at work, and in
    their relationships.
  • In her 1983 discussion of Playboy, Barbara
    Ehrenreich notes when the magazine emerged in
    1953, American men were beginning to feel
    constrained by the demands of marriage, work and
    fatherhoodand Playboy unapologetically
    celebrated the bachelors lifestyle.
  • She argues that Playboy painted an idealistic
    picture of the well-educated, confirmed bachelor
    who appreciates the finer things in life wine,
    jazz, scotch, art, and women. Playboys success
    was built on its celebration of male independence
    from the domestic responsibilities of marriage
    and fatherhood.

75
David gauntlett Male magazines and modern male
identities
  • See chapter handouts

76
Mens Magazines
  • There is a need to investigate whether these
    new publications are in fact a progressive force
    in society.
  • The term 'progressive' asks the question of
    whether these magazines have a positive influence
    over the readership -- such as by helping men
    come to terms with their personal idea of what it
    means to be male in a world that is becoming
    increasingly feminized, or by providing advice on
    masculinity and introducing a desperately needed
    'men only' orientated form of entertainment.
  • On the other hand, these magazines may be a
    negative force in society as they are seen as
    being sexist, objectifying women.

77
  • Unlike women's magazines, which also feature
    women on the front cover, lads magazines usually
    have scantily clad or even naked women as their
    come on and many people believe, that despite
    being very successful, they are far from being a
    progressive force in society and are little more
    than an anti-feminist backlash.
  • "While women become 'friends' with their
    magazines there is an inbuilt male resistance to
    the idea of a magazine that makes public and
    shares ideas about being a man. To men it is an
    unacceptable contradiction. Self-consciousness is
    permissible, even attractive, in a woman it is
    perceived as weak and unmanly in a
    man."(Campaign, 26/7/85 37)

78
Men's health
  • "giving readers the thing they seem to crave but
    dare not admit advice."
  • This is certainly true in part. Increasingly
    these magazines seem designed not simply to
    celebrate masculinity, but also to shore it up.
    The endless 'how - to' articles on sexuality
    actually offer precious little advice, instead
    providing men with a great deal of hand -
    holding. In the pages of a recent Men's Health,
    for example, one finds an article promising to
    explain the "Mysteries of the Breast.
  • The piece is filled with extravagantly
    simpleminded -- even apologetic -- recitations of
    the obvious, gently nudging manly men into a
    vague recognition of their partner's needs, all
    the while reassuring them that simple
    consideration isn't a sign of incipient
    sissiness.
  • It may sound like a page straight out of a
    sensitive training manual, but the bottom line on
    the breast is simple "Find out what your partner
    enjoys - and do it," writes Curt Presman, the
    author. Then to assure his readers that real
    women actually appreciate this novel technique,
    he quotes several. "Girls like guys who ask them
    what to do during sex," says Debbie a 21-year-old
    estate agent. Several paragraphs down, Presman
    finds another appreciative young woman who
    assures him that, "the more a man pays attention
    to my breasts, the better I feel about my body."

79
Women as Sexual Objects
  • Provocative images of women's partly clothed or
    naked bodies are especially prevalent in
    advertising. Shari Graydon, former president of
    Canadas MediaWatch, argues that womens bodies
    are sexualized in ads in order to grab the
    viewers attention. Women become sexual objects
    when their bodies and their sexuality are linked
    to products that are bought and sold.
  • Media activist Jean Kilbourne agrees. She notes
    that womens bodies are often dismembered into
    legs, breasts or thighs, reinforcing the message
    that women are objects rather than whole human
    beings.
  • Although womens sexuality is no longer a taboo
    subject, many researchers question whether or not
    the blatant sexualization of womens bodies in
    the media is liberating. Laurie Abraham,
    executive editor of Elle magazine, warns that the
    biggest problem with womens magazines is "how
    much we lie about sex." Those "lies" continue to
    perpetuate the idea that womens sexuality is
    subservient to mens pleasure. In her study of
    Cosmopolitan and Playboy magazines, for example,
    Nicole Krassas found that both men and womens
    magazines contain a single vision of female
    sexualitythat "women should primarily concern
    themselves with attracting and sexually
    satisfying men."
  • The presence of misinformation and media
    stereotypes is disturbing, given research that
    indicates young people often turn to media for
    information about sex and sexuality. In 2003,
    David Buckingham and Sara Bragg reported that
    two-thirds of young people turn to media when
    they want to learn about sex - the same
    percentage of kids who ask their mothers for
    information and advice.

80
  • Many researchers argue that the
    over-representation of thin women in mass media
    reinforces the conclusion that "physically
    attractive" and "sexually desirable" mean "thin."
    Amy Malkins study of magazine covers reveals
    that messages about weight loss are often placed
    next to messages about men and relationships.
    Some of her examples "Get the Body You Really
    Want" beside "How to Get Your Husband to Really
    Listen," and "Stay Skinny" paired with "What Men
    Really Want."
  • The fascination with finding out what men really
    want also tends to keep female characters in film
    and television busy. Professor Nancy Signorielli
    reports that men are more likely than women to be
    shown "on the job" in movies and television
    shows. Female characters, on the other hand, are
    more likely to be seen dating, or talking about
    romance.

81
  • Advertising
  • The second media

82
ADVERTISING THE SECOND MEDIA Gender identity in
magazine advertising
  • It is important to note the significance of
    gender in advertising.
  • According to Sut Jhally, gender is probably the
    social resource that is used most by advertisers
    they seem to be obsessed with gender and
    sexuality.' The reason for this is that 'gender
    is one of our deepest and most important traits
    as human beings.
  • Our understanding of ourselves as either male or
    female is the most important aspect of our
    definition of ourselves as individuals What
    better place to draw upon than an area of social
    behaviour that can be communicated almost
    instantly and which reaches into the very core of
    our definition as human beings?' (Jhally,
    1987135).
  • Thus, advertising has become a central
    socialising agent for cultural values connected
    to gender.

83
Masculinity and Advertising
  • In its study of masculinity and sports media, the
    research group Children Now found that most
    commercials directed to male viewers tend to air
    during sports programming. Women rarely appear in
    these commercials, and when they do, theyre
    generally portrayed in stereotypical ways.
  • In fact, in his analysis of gender in
    advertising, author and University of North Texas
    professor Steve Craig argues that women tend to
    be presented as "rewards" for men who choose the
    right product. He describes such commercials as
    "narratives of playful escapades away from home
    and family." They operate, he says, at the level
    of fantasypresenting idealized portrayals of men
    and women. When he focused specifically on beer
    commercials, Craig found that the men were
    invariably "virile, slim and white"and the women
    always "eager for male companionship."
  • Author and academic Susan Bordo (University of
    Kentucky) has also analyzed gender in
    advertising, and agrees that men are usually
    portrayed as virile, muscular and powerful. Their
    powerful bodies dominate space in the ads. For
    women, the focus is on slenderness, dieting, and
    attaining a feminine ideal women are always
    presented as not just thin, but also weak and
    vulnerable.
  • These critics and others suggest that just as
    traditional advertising has for decades sexually
    objectified women and their bodies, todays
    marketing campaigns are objectifying men in the
    same way. A 2002 study by the University of
    Wisconsin suggests that this new focus on fit and
    muscled male bodies is causing men the same
    anxiety and personal insecurity that women have
    felt for decades.

84
Determining the potential for 'genderfuck' in
gender-ambivalent advertising imagery
  • Genderfuck refers to the self-conscious effort to
    "fuck with" or play with traditional notions of
    gender identity, gender roles, and gender
    presentation.It falls under the umbrella of the
    transgender spectrum

85
  • The effect of unstable signifying practices in a
    libidinal (The psychic and emotional energy
    associated with instinctual biological drives
  • Sexual desire and manifestation of the sexual
    drive)
  • Economy of multiple sexualities the
    destabilisation of gender as an analytical
    category, though it is not, necessarily, the
    signal of the end of gender the play of
    masculine and feminine on the body subverts the
    possibility of possessing a unified subject
    position.-- June L. Reich on Genderfuck'.

86
  • Since the mid-1990s, advertising has increasingly
    employed images in which the gender and sexual
    orientation of the subject(s) are markedly (and
    purposefully) ambiguous.
  • As an ancillary to this, there are also a growing
    number of distinctly homosexual images - and
    these are far removed from depictions of the camp
    gay employed as the comic relief elsewhere in
    mainstream media.
  • We need to consider how these depictions
    undermine conventional gender role stereotypes
    and the norm of heterosexuality that dominate
    advertising and the media at large.

87
Gender ambiguity
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89
  • The revival of the Women's Movement in the 1970s
    directed an onslaught of criticism towards
    post-war images in which women were 'usually
    shown as being subordinate, passive, submissive
    and marginal, performing a limited number of
    secondary and uninteresting tasks confined to
    their sexuality, their emotions and their
    domesticity' (Strinati, 1995184). Subsequent to
    pressure placed by liberal feminists on the media
    and advertising industries, the more 'positive'
    image of the independent 'New Woman' emerged,
    followed by the 'New Man' in the 1980s

90
  • By way of semiology, and a consideration of the
    motives of advertising and consumer industries,
    feminist analysis of these representations in the
    early nineties, however, warned of their latent
    sexist meanings.
  • We need to images that are now becoming prevalent
    in advertising.
  • analysis of the progressive depictions of men and
    women (and androgyny) by advertisers.
  • Androgyny is a term, which refers to the mixing
    of masculine and feminine characteristics,
  • And consider the role of the New Woman and New
    Man, and then from New Woman/Man to
    gender-ambivalent queer images.

91
  • . In Images of Woman (1975), Millum analysed
    adverts in women's magazines by looking at the
    characteristics of three central elements in the
    images props, setting and actors (1975114). In
    his classic study Gender Advertisements (1976),
    Goffman analysed adverts that he had selected 'at
    will' from current popular magazines that were
    chosen on the basis that they appeared to
    delineate 'a discrete theme bearing on gender'.
    Goffman justifies his seemingly haphazard
    approach by discussing 'how pictures can and
    can't be used in social analysis' claiming that
    'themes that can be delineated through pictures
    have a very mixed ontological status and that any
    attempt to legislate as to the order of fact
    represented in these themes is likely to be
    optimistic.' Significantly for our purposes, he
    asserts that his study takes issue with two of
    three methodological questions discovery and
    presentation, but not proof (197624).

92
  • In as much as behaviour is the process of living
    life, the development of behaviour sets, which
    can be thought of as roles, may be employed for
    the purpose of simplifying the task the idea was
    first proposed by William James (1890). 'Some
    roles, James believed, we choose for ourselves
    ... Other roles are prescribed for us by virtue
    of our position in life'.
  • The ideas of James have been further developed by
    a number of sociologists notably Merton (1957),
    Mead (1934), Parsons (1951) and Goffman (1959).

93
Goffman
  • In The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life,
    Goffman's main contribution to the discussion
    concerns the analysis of characterisation. His
    suggestion that the performer attempts to present
    an idealised version of the character (page 45)
    which reflects the values of society - since the
    notion of the ideal is one which is derived from
    society - is somewhat reminiscent of the Freudian
    concept of super-ego.

94
  • Goffman suggests that belief in a particular role
    by an individual performer, is related to
    perceived reality. (page 28) Hence there is
    considerable importance attached to the clothing
    worn by the performer whilst in character, which
    primarily serves to increase belief in the role.
    The wearing of an appropriate costume enables the
    character to be donned more readily which, in
    turn, contributes to the definition of the
    situation 'the more the individual is concerned
    with the reality which is not available to
    perception, the more must he concentrate his
    attention on appearances.' (page 241)

95
  • This aspect of 'appearance' is part of what
    Goffman identifies as 'front' and, in
    performance terms, it is closely related to
    'manner'. The appearance and manner of the
    performer serve to enrich the quality of
    performance, and they will normally operate in
    harmony. 'We often expect, of course, a
    confirming consistency between appearance and
    manner'. (page 35) Front distinguishes between
    the public part of the performance and backstage,
    or off-stage, action which is still carried out
    within the scope of the role it is 'that part of
    the performance which regularly functions in a
    general and fixed fashion to define the
    situation'. (page 32) It also encompasses
    'setting' the furniture and props that make up
    the set for a particular act.

96
  • Non-verbal communication in the form of gestures
    which are made by the performer 'during the
    interaction' (page 40) serve to add a
    confirmatory emphasis Goffman uses the example
    of a baseball umpire who's body language is
    actually communicating his decision whilst he is
    in the act of processing the information upon
    which it is to be based. Related to this, there
    is a possibility of accidentally misleading an
    audience with unintended body language. For this
    reason, it is suggested, the performer keeps
    non-relevant gestures to a bare minimum. (page 59)

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98
  • Erving Goffmans perspective on advertisements is
    that they do not necessarily depict how men and
    women actually behave, but that they are a good
    representation of the way we think they behave.
    Print advertisements, therefore, do not offer an
    exact snapshot of real life but instead offer a
    perspective on a certain aspect or aspects of
    life they conventionalise our conventions, and
    stylise what is already a stylisation (Goffman,
    1979 84).

99
  • Advertisements can be offensive, and not just in
    the most palpable way by being openly crude and
    distasteful. They can also cause offence in more
    subtle ways by portraying men and women in
    stereotypical roles that suggest certain
    implications about their capabilities. Every
    culture has accepted routine forms which indicate
    how men and women are supposed to look, act, and
    relate to each other in a wide variety of social
    situations (Leiss, Kline Jhally, 1986 166).
    These norms, when represented in advertising
    reinforce certain stereotypes. The concept of
    stereotyping was coined by Walter Lippman, who
    refers to it as the guarantee of our self
    respect, value, position and rights he goes on
    to state that stereotypes are highly charged with
    the feelings attached to them (in Dyer, 2002
    11).

100
  • Betty Friedan studied the way in which women were
    portrayed in the forties and fifties in womens
    magazines. She had previously found, in the late
    thirties, that women were portrayed (in
    advertisements) as autonomous heroines, but this
    representation had made way for the glorified
    housewife image by the forties. Friedan
    concluded that manufacturers had decided to make
    women better consumers of home products by
    reinforcing the concept of total fulfilment
    through the wholesome role of housewife and
    mother

101
  • The advertisement has the tagline She has the
    recipe for good citizenship, which puts forward
    the message that women should be accomplished in
    the kitchen in order to be successful, good
    citizens.
  • The notion that, in advertising, manufacturers
    try to create an image that will maximise the
    sale of their product brings up the question of
    causality. This looks at whether advertising
    merely reflects reality, or directly influences
    and shapes reality by providing role models.
    Goffman states that self-definition is guided and
    externally dominated that advertisements try to
    convince us that this is how men and women are,
    want to be, or should be, in relation to
    themselves, and in relation to others in the
    arena of life (Goffman, 1979 vii).

102
(Historical examples)
  • Courtney and Lockeretzs report A Womans Place
    An Analysis of the Roles Portrayed by Women in
    Print Advertising sampled various advertisements
    from 1970, with specific regard to the number and
    sexes of the people appearing, their occupations
    and activities, and the types of products they
    were shown associated with (Courtney Whipple,
    1983 10).
  • Some of the most significant figures obtained
    from the research are 45 of males were depicted
    as working outside of the home, compared with
    only 9 of women of the 9 of women, 58 were
    entertainers, and the remainder were depicted in
    low-status jobs no women were depicted as a
    high-level professional or executive.
  • Courtney and Lockeretz found that women were
    portrayed as buyers of articles like cleaning
    aids and cosmetics, whereas men were shown to be
    buying important, expensive items such as cars,
    industrial goods and bank services. Some of the
    general stereotypes encountered, therefore, were
    a womans place is in the home, women do not make
    important decisions, and women are dependant on
    men for protection.

103
Goffmans study
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