The Perpetuation and Preservation of Male Supremacy in Mainstream Media

865 Words2 Pages

A number of popular television shows and films filling mainstream media today have taken a spin to promote women to main character roles of power and command. The traits of these female characters, however, become illusionary as plots thicken to reveal their status to be subordinate to leading male character roles; of which are typically controlling or manipulative over gender stereotypic female traits within the script. While media is being blindly applauded for their newfound glorification of women in power, there remains an underlying message of male supremacy in more than many broadcasted portrayals. Today’s mainstream television media delivers a notion that only a man can pave way for the merit of a woman. I am a woman. Without the feminist understanding that my education has afforded me, mainstream media portrayals of woman in relation to man would burn holes through the fabric of my mind and dismantle my ambitions. Ignoring the infraction that media portrayals impose on naïve minds gives the impression that it is acceptable to be inappropriately cultivated in gender equality. Television media continues to pose a grave threat; but worse is the deceitful attempt to find something attributable to women, the attempt to lure them with admiration, only to smack them with the patronizing undertone of being incomparable to men. The first studies relating to gender portrayal in the media developed in the 1950s with the introduction of Second Wave Feminism (Boyle, 2005). Mass media was a main concern for Second Wave feminists due to its oppressive illustrations of women in different genres. The subject of gender misrepresentations is still relevant in contemporary media studies. In 2011, a documentary dealing with the stereotypical r... ... middle of paper ... ..., K.E. (2005) Feminism without men: feminist media studies in a post-feminist age. In: Curran, J. and Gurevitch, M. (eds.) Mass Media and Society: fourth edition. Arnold, pp. 29-43. Coon, D., & Mitterer, J. O. (2013). Introduction to psychology: Gateways to mind and behavior. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Cengage Learning. Kellner, D. (1998). Multiple Literacies And Critical Pedagogy In A Multicultural Society. Educational Theory, 48(1), 103-122. Newsom, J. S., Scully, R. K., Dreyfous, G. W., Redlich, S. J., Congdon, J., Holland, E., Cvetko, S., ... Ro*Co Films Educational (Firm). (2011). Miss representation. Sausalito, Calif.: Ro*co Films Educational. Tragos, P. (2009). Monster Masculinity: Honey, I'll Be In The Garage Reasserting My Manhood. Journal Of Popular Culture, 42(3), 541-553. Willimon, B. (2013). House of Cards [Television series]. Washington: Netflix.

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