Sexism In Advertising: The Connotation Of Women In The Media

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Turn on the news or read through the Sunday paper and the majority of what you will see is men reporters, editors, and publishers. In fact, women only hold 3% of powerful, decision-making roles in telecommunications, entertainment, publishing, and advertising (Siebel Newsom, 2011). Take a look at the United States politics’. Most people can only name a handful of women who hold positions in the White House. Even then, the general connotation of those women is not a positive one. Women like Senator Hilary Clinton are constantly called ‘bitch’ or told to ‘go iron my clothes’. Female news anchors are usually portrayed as simply something nice to look at by being told to wear low cut shirts and pounds of makeup. Ever flipped through ads in a magazine? Naked women, breasts, butts, skinny, blonde, and white. These are just a few ways in which media portrays, or in some cases fail to portray, women. There are several ways in …show more content…

Everyone has heard the phrase “sex sells”, but is it really sex? Or is it women’s sexuality that sells. A 1978 ad put out by the Australian Films Commission featured a woman’s bottom half (long legs, bikini bottom, and stilettos) with a title “Our product’s got great legs” (Mills, 1978). The lack of the woman’s face depersonalizes her entirely. The ad doesn’t feature a beautiful woman, it features beautiful legs without a woman. This truly implies that women’s bodies are all you really need, not the personality and face that usually goes with it. Another analysis in Mills’ journal is by Ronald Barthels who points out that the ad doesn’t even explicitly state what the Film Commission was trying to sell (Mills, 1978). Essentially, the only message relayed in this poster is “if you buy our product, you will get a woman like this” (Mills, 1978, p. 21). The woman’s body alone can be seen as a symbol that doesn’t even need words. The body alone represents what is

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