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More handpicked essays just for you.
how does pop culture influence perceptions on sexuality
negative effects of sex and violence in the media
Sex and violence in media
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The ubiquitous news stories generated by last season’s Super Bowl were a matter of priorities, and it seems that in America ours are quite jumbled.
In the days following the game, we heard the chattering classes rail about the various social evils allegedly embodied by the Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake “costume malfunction,” from the racism inherent in a white male stripping a black female to the sexual violence underlying the act of a man exposing a woman in public.
While bigotry and misogyny are profound ills that pollute America, the so-called Nipplegate controversy made for a poor rallying cry against these problems simply because one can safely assume Jackson was a willing conspirator rather than an innocent victim. The overproduced, tedious dance act that raised the nation’s ire can more accurately be viewed as a product of the bad taste and warped values that currently define mainstream American society.
Why is it no one complained about P. Diddy and Nelly presenting the United States as a country that prizes a fur coat above all else? Having lived in Europe, where topless beaches are normal, I can assure you that the obsessive displays of material wealth by America’s pop icons made more of an impression on foreigners than the sudden, visual declaration that Janet Jackson owns a breast.
Half of the Earth’s population has breasts; comparably few have diamond-studded Rolexes. Yet apparently it is all right for our entertainers to wag the inordinate affluence we lord over the rest of the planet but rude for them to expose, however briefly, one of the common features we share with everyone else.
Even when it comes to skin we are selective about our morals. Football cheerleaders typically display more bod...
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...ing audience to say “no” to various social dysfunctions such as illiteracy. She then distracted everyone, and subsequently undermined her own message, by punctuating it with a Vegas flash courtesy of Mr. Timberlake. That should have told America something about how seriously to take Janet Jackson. If you need to drive home your social commentary with a starburst nipple accessory, perhaps your rhetoric needs some work.
In that light, we all should have sprinkled a grain of salt on Janet’s exposed chest. Miss Jackson, while sometimes nasty, should never have been a topic for discussion except to point out how silly it is to worry about a breast while the nation is mired in a war.
It is about time America got its priorities in line, because there is something very wrong with a country that is more offended by a glimpse of live skin than graves full of dead flesh.
“Bootycandy” addresses modern-day stereotypes toward gay and black people. O’Hara takes stereotypes that might seem hurtful and transforms them into a candid comical medium that audiences can laugh at and, most importantly, understand. While “Bootycandy” had me laughing uncontrollably, it prompted me to question society and how much these stereotypes are ingrained into our society.
Randolph quickly mentions how the research behind the relationship men have with their bodies has not included subordinate men. Research treats the experience white men have with their bodies, as the normative experience. Randolph criticizes how current research discusses how institutions influence the genre, exhibiting black men as violent, and misogynist, justifying policing. What most researchers forget however, is how black men benefit from the rap industry, while simultaneously not taking into account their lack of institutional power. Criticizing rap as hegemonic and masculine fails to
In 1979, China decided to establish a one child policy which states that couples are only allowed to have one child, unless they meet certain exceptions[1].In order to understand what social impacts the one child policy has created in China it important to evaluate the history of this law. China’s decision to implement a Child policy has caused possible corruption, an abuse of women’s rights, has led to high rates of female feticide, has created a gender ratio problem for China, and has led to specific problems associated with both the elderly and younger generation. Finally, an assessment of why China’s one child policy is important to the United States allows for a full evaluation of the policy.
Cottom speaks from personal experience, which give her arguments a validity that Ms. Freeman 's does not have. Cottom’s article is more successful in showing her rhetorical purpose than Freeman’s because she has a firsthand perspective of racial appropriation, giving her credibility. Throughout the article Cottom mentions multiple occasions where white men and women at bars have treated her as though she were just a sexual machine. She tells specific things that have happened to her such as “Woman asking to feel my breasts in the ladies’ restroom. Men asking me for a threesome, as his drunk girlfriend or wife looks on smiling. Frat boys offering me cash to “motorboat” my cleavage. Country boys in cowboy hats attempting to impress his buddies by grinding on my ass to an Outcast music set (Cottom,
China’s one child policy has overall negatively affected not only it’s population, but also China’s overall economic state both presently and in the future, China’s social aspect of life, and finally it has negatively affected China due to its over excessiveness along with it’s unnecessity.
Light, Alan. "About a Salary or Reality? – Rap’s Recurrent Conflict." Rpt. in That’s the Joint!: The Hip-Hop Studies Reader. Ed. Murray Forman and Mark Anthony Neal. New York, NY: Routledge, 2004. 137-146. Print.
In the words of rapper Busta Rhymes, “hip-hop reflects the truth, and the problem is that hip-hop exposes a lot of the negative truth that society tries to conceal. It’s a platform where we could offer information, but it’s also an escape” Hip-hop is a culture that emerged from the Bronx, New York, during the early 1970s. Hip-Hop was a result of African American and Latino youth redirecting their hardships brought by marginalization from society to creativity in the forms of MCing, DJing, aerosol art, and breakdancing. Hip-hop serves as a vehicle for empowerment while transcending borders, skin color, and age. However, the paper will focus on hip-hop from the Chican@-Latin@ population in the United States. In the face of oppression, the Chican@-Latin@ population utilized hip hop music as a means to voice the community’s various issues, desires, and in the process empower its people.
My aim is to find out how does the One-child policy work in real life and what are people’s opinions on it. After my research and survey, I concluded that, the one child policy is necessary in China, in order to control such a large population.
No matter where a person goes throughout the United States, they will not walk through the streets of New Jersey or New York for long before they hear the latest scandals with Kim Kardashian or Miley Cyrus. If a person walks into any public store they’ll quickly hear discussion of the latest stars on American Idol from passersby. While we scoff at the antics of celebrities, but at the same time we can foster an almost fanatical desire to be as if not more famous then the people everyone talks about. It is rather human to feel envy, jealously, and desire; we all want to be looked favorably upon. We roll our eyes when someone repeatedly states how beautiful or intelligent a celebrity is, yet even a skeptic can’t help but desire the admiration that celebrity received. Why do men work out? Why do women use such extensive amounts of cosmetics? Why are people so determined to be revered? The answer to individual’s thirst for fame can vary but it’s unavoidable to assume that individual wanted to be the center of attention. We want to be admired, favored, and loved as much as the celebrities that we worship. Reality television has shifted to show the “perfect” life of our celebrities and how happy they are compared to the common people. Neoliberals and authoritarian realized how our fanatical love for our celebrities can be used against us as to quote Frank Furedi from his academic journal on the topic of celebrity culture in which he has stated in the abstract in his first page: “Often celebrity provides an alternative source of validation. The tendency to outsource authority to the celebrity represents an attempt to bypass the problem of legitimacy by politicians and other figures.” Through celebrities’ neoliberals and
Semagrams hide information by the use of symbols or signs(Gary).The different types of semagram are visual, and text. A visual semagram uses innocent everyday physical objects to carry a message, such as doodles like random drawing on a piece of paper or the positioning of items on a desk or Website( Gray). In retrospect it takes a normal object that would be open to the eye out in the open but it is wearing a mask from another reason.. A text semagram hides a message by modifying the appearance of the carrier text, such as subtle changes in font size or type, adding extra spaces, or different trappings in letters or handwritten text. Open codes hide a message in a legitimate carrier message in ways that are not obvious to an unsuspecting observer(Gray). The carrier message is sometimes called the overt communication whereas the hidden message is the covert communication. This reminds me of how the government encourages use websites like Facebook and Instagram so they can have permission to access to our phones. They use the permission page from the source to somewhat mention the access but not in a way everyone can
On February 1, 2004, millions of Americans sat down around their television sets with their family and friends to watch the biggest sports event of the year: Super Bowl XXXVIII. Inside the Reliant Stadium of Houston, Texas, the New England Patriots beat the Carolina Panthers 32-29 in one of the closest games in recent history; but this year it wasn’t the football game or even the commercials that had people talking. It was an incident that occurred during the halftime show that involved pop singers Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake that ended in millions of Americans having the privilege to see the left breast of Janet Jackson for a few moments. This single issue may not have been a huge ordeal in itself, but it brought to surface some very pertinent questions about how far was too far in the media, what the government should do to control it, and what effects sex and violence in the media were having on American culture.
Nudity: a controversial topic from the beginning of time. It has raised questions such as: Should girls have to cover their shoulders when in the classroom? What is the appropriate length for a pair of shorts? And one of the more famous campaigns should women be allowed to “free the nipple.” Recently nudity has been used by celebrities to show support for presidential candidate Hillary Clinton. This is a controversy because some people believe that a woman using her body as a sexual image promotes the idea that others also have the right to view and support the idea that women are sexualized objects. In this article “Katy Perry’s naked vote reveals more than she wanted” written by Barbra Ellen explores this controversial topic by using many rhetorical devices.
It is the responsibility of any government to provide for its population. It is due to this reason that family planning is becoming a major controversial concept in many nations. One of the most controversial population control policies is the Chinese one child family policy which was implemented in 1979. The policy was forced by the view that the increasingly growing population could evidently compromise the economic development and sustainability of the Chinese nation (Liu, Onuaha, 2005). The law dictates that each family should legally have only one child. It should also be noted that the strain that the increasing young population posed to the existing structures could have been another reason for the implementation of the one child policy.
The objectification of women in the media and women voluntarily subjecting themselves to this demeaning objectification is rapidly increasing in lieu of feminist ideals and a new age push for women empowerment. The media has long capitalized on women’s sexuality in everything from music videos to manipulative advertisements, appealing to the male gaze while simultaneously instilling a sense of longing in girls of all ages to look like these women. In Lily Allen’s song, “Hard Out Here”, she attempts to bring light to this issue of women being treated as simply sexual objects and how all women are expected to look and act. However, in contrast to her empowering lyrics, Allen’s video takes a turn for the worst when she implements strictly black female dancers as representation of the cliché sexism found in music videos placing them at the butt of the parody.
...ther women were presented as objects and deemed inferior to men due to the working of the patriarchal society’s construct of femininity. Also the she came to the conclusion that the controlling images of black women that are used by the white male in an attempt to suppress black women’s vocal resistance to their subjugation and inequality. Ultimately Collins conclude that The perpetuation of sexual oppression does commit violence not only to racial equality but also to the gender and sexual differences among blacks, which damage the construction of commonality within the black community, and between men and women. She also stresses, however, that the perseverance, and changing contours, of racial inequality in our globalizing world is dominated by mass media that produces beliefs that seek to deny racism and undercut mass awareness of its ongoing subtle influences.