Evolution of Women's Portrayal in Media

980 Words2 Pages

As time evolves, media has become more prevalent. It has been designed to shape and influence the perceptions of the viewers. Women’s participation in media began much later than men, who initially played the primary character. Even so, women’s roles have greatly been domesticated by popular culture, especially in advertisements. They have varied from cooks, maids, and as of the late 60’s, women have been exploited in the marketing world as sexual objects to sell products, which raised a cause for concern of the portrayal of women in media (Shrikhande, 1). However, even since the 60’s until now, the objectification of women in media has not simmered down, but gradually increased. A good example of this is the Carl’s Jr’s advertisement for Super …show more content…

Commodification can be defined as the process of turning people into things, or commodities, for sale, i.e. the commodification of women’s bodies through advertising and media representations (Kirk and Okazawa-Rey, G-2). Where as, objectification is the attitudes and behaviors by which people are treated as if they were “things” (Kirk and Okazawa-Rey, G-4). These two key terms play an important role in the method of advertisement used by Carl’s Jr. In the beginning of the advertisement, Charlotte McKinney, a well-known model, who appears to be naked, is stared at by men in a sexual manner, which can ideally be called the ‘male gaze’. Male gaze was a concept coined by feminist film critic Laura Mulvey in 1976. It describes the …show more content…

magazine, sexual objectification is described as the process of representing or treating a person like a sex object, one that serves another’s sexual pleasure (Heldman). She also devised a Sex Object Test (SOT) to measure the presence of sexual objectification in images in the form of seven questions. Two questions that can be applied to this advertisement, “Does the image present a sexualized person as a stand-in for an object?” and “Does the image show a sexualized person as a commodity that can be bought and sold?” (Heldman) for which both answers will be yes. The model is used as stand-in for the burger that is only introduced at the end of the commercial. Although the advertisement makes it seem as though the model is the subject, she is merely degraded as a sexualized object to present the final commodity, which is the beef

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