Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Final Annotated Bibliography


Grabe, Shelley. "Concern Over Strong Media Influence On Women's Body Image." Medical News Today. MediLexicon International, 13 May 2008. Web. 11 Dec. 2012.
Postdoctoral researcher Shelley Grabe and psychology professor Janet Hyde from the University of Wisconsin-Madison perform a detailed analysis of 77 previous studies on more than 15,000 subjects.  They explore the immense effects of exposure to media images with the way that women view their bodies.  Their analysis concluded that media, no matter what the type, influences women in a negative way, and consequently women are experiencing body dissatisfaction.  Grabe and Hyde conclude that the problem is increasing with increased technological advances.

Deere, Jennifer. "Body Image, Media, And Eating Disorders." Psychiatry Online. N.p., 01 May 2006. Web.
Jennifer Deere, a psychiatrist affiliated with the Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital and McLean Hospital in Boston Massachusetts explore eating disorders, including obesity in America Today.  Deere explores the factors, the main ones being politics, social pressures, and media.  Deere highlights the negative impact on health, and the ways in which this problem can begin to be solved.

"ANAD." Eating Disorders Statistics « « National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders. N.p., n.d. Web. 11 Dec. 2012.
The National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Diseases is a non-profit “dedicated to the prevention and alleviation of eating disorders.” (NAANAD)  The website contains general information about eating disorders, current statistics pertaining to the issue, and a detailed description of each different type of eating disorder.  The website also includes a wide array of information for those who suffer from an eating disorder, or those who want to help a friend with an eating disorder.  The National Association of Anorexia Nervosa is very respected in the Health Community as being a valuable resource for information on the topic of eating disorders in the United States.

FINAL Revision


Dear freshman college girl, 


Commercial break!  As Americans, it is nearly impossible to ignore the constant blast of advertisements that are shoved in our faces on a daily basis. These advertisements often include a beautiful, tall, thin, flawless woman who appears confident, successful and has plenty of attention from the opposite sex.  The unstated message is that you must look like the womenportrayed in these ads in order to be considered beautiful and desirable in today’s society.  It’s not a secret that women love to look at other women. So, it’s no wonder beautiful women are often used in the media to sell products and send out messages.  And let’s be honest here, who doesn’t love to consult a glossy magazine for style and fashion advice? However entertaining it is, I urge young women to think twice about what these media images are truly telling girls.  It’s one thing to seek out tips on how to wear our make-up, our hair, our clothes, or how to have an attractive body, but is it normal for the average girl to flip through the pages of Glamour magazine and think that if she buys the products being advertised she will actually achieve the look of the women on the pages?



Throughout history, the ideal image of beauty has been difficult for women to attain.  In the United States today, we are constantly bombarded with images of the “ideal” man or woman, and these images effect us and shape what we come to know as our “generalized other.”  Our generalized other “functions as a sort of monitoring or measuring device with which individuals may judge their own actions against those of their generalized conceptions of how members of society are expected to act.” (Devor, 530) We see the faces in media as a part of this judging device, and we tailor our behaviors and our appearance accordingly.  In our world today, media is one of the main factors that shapes and idealizes our conception of the what we think society expects from us.  As a very young girl I loved to play with Barbie’s. From their perfect hair and skin, their long legs, flat tummies, and giant breasts, I idolized Barbie and thought that she was perfect.  From the moment I could walk and talk I was surrounded by dolls personifying the perfect woman, and it instilled in me a false belief that in order to be pretty I needed to wear makeup, wear trendy clothes, and maintain a rail-thin figure. My experience is a perfect example of how early this standard of beauty is impressed on little girls. Unfortunately, it never really goes away.  On the contrary, it gets much worse as girls grow older and they feel even more pressure to look attractive, especially to the opposite sex.  Growing up as a female without some insecurities or body issues isn’t easy.  From the moment baby girls open their eyes they are bombarded with images of beautiful women, and are deceived into believing that a normal woman can look like a super model or reality television star. 


Women everywhere, whether they like to admit it or not, are subconsciously comparing themselves to what they see in movies, television shows, magazines, and on billboards and ads. The corporations that manufacture and distribute every product targeted to women know this and use this knowledge to their full advantage.  The beauty industry, the diet industry, fashion industry and the like rake in billions of dollars in revenue each year selling products to women who feel their appearance doesn’t measure up.  If the model uses the product and she is beautiful won’t I be beautiful if I buy and use the product too?  This way of thinking makes no logical sense, however media images are powerful.  Advertising agencies use all means at their disposal to pull at the heart strings of female consumers and exploit their deepest insecurities.


In a patriarchal society, it is easy for women to be pressured into placing priority in vanity and appearance, since females in our society have always been told that life is easier when you are attractive, and appearance is extremely important.  As women in today’s society, we are expected to look pretty and “done-up” in order to be thought of as attractive, and this can have extreme consequences for girls who compare themselves to the Kim Kardashians and Kate Moss’s adorning every billboard and movie screen.  Shelly Grabe, a professor at the University of Wisconsin stated in her article, "I want to stress that it's totally normal for women to want to be attractive, but what's happening in our society is that many women are striving toward something that's not very realistic or obtainable, and that leads to a lot of health consequences." (Grabe)  In a society with rising rates of obesity and eating disorders, girls face impossible obstacles to fit into the expectations of our society’s idea of what is attractive and desirable.  The most devastating consequence of our medias skewed portrayal of beauty: the distorted and unrealistic standards females hold themselves to and the consequences they have on girls self-esteem and body image.



Girls are pressured to place a high priority on their looks above all else.  This pressure to be obsessed with appearance has devastating effects for many girl’s body image and health.  Women are striving to achieve a weight that is unrealistic for them. The National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders affirms that “the body type portrayed in advertising as the ideal is possessed naturally by only 5% of American females.”  Clearly, only a miniscule percentage of women actually have the body type displayed in the media that others so deeply desire.  Jennifer L. Deere, a psychiatrist with a special interest in body image and eating disorders explains, “children exposed to excessive TV viewing, magazines, and movies are at higher risk of obesity. When other variables are controlled, TV exposure independently increases the odds of becoming overweight by 50% for both men and women. Furthermore, the type of exposure, not the amount, is correlated with negative body image. Specifically, rates of exposure to soap operas, movies, and music videos were associated with higher rates of body dissatisfaction and drive for thinness.” This drive for thinness has effects on not only self-esteem but it has tremendous health effects for the women that feel pressured fit themselves in the mold of the Barbie doll figure.  Negative self image effects not only their ability to feel content with their weight and looks, but many women take it to extreme and unhealthy proportions to become skinny like their media role models.  In a survey published by the National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders, “91% of women surveyed on a college campus had attempted to control their weight through dieting. 22% dieted “often” or “always.” 47% of girls in 5th-12th grade reported wanting to lose weight because of magazine pictures. 69% of girls in 5th-12th grade reported that magazine pictures influenced their idea of a perfect body shape. 42% of 1st-3rd grade girls want to be thinner, and 81% of 10 year olds are afraid of being fat.”  This statistics are shocking.  Although these little girls may not be reading Cosmopolitan Magazine or Keeping up with the Kardashians, they are still immensely effected by the pressure to be skinny, consequently imbedding these ideas of unworthiness or ugliness when they look in the mirror for years to come.


The current media culture is complicated and very confusing. Women are told that they can and should “have it all.” They expect the perfect man, the perfect body, the perfect hair, and their beloved models, actresses and celebrities tell them how to do it. The media confuses them with mixed messages about what is sexy, making it difficult to choose a role model. The heroin chic waif made popular by Kate Moss in the early 1990s competes with the voluptuous Baywatch babe personified by Pamela Anderson, that competes with reality TV’s fashion icon Lauren Conrad, and everyone wants to reflect what they see.  
There can be a solution to this problem.  Girls deserve to feel great about themselves and feel beautiful by their own standards.  I believe that the solution to this problem is addressing these unrealistic ideals of beauty at an early age.  Children need to learn, both in school and at home, that they do not need to try to achieve unattainable looks and weights that are unhealthy for them in the long run.  Parents can also help  by refusing to buy toys for their children that perpetuate this flawed conception of how a girl should look.  Let’s face it, the times are a-changing, and the rain-thin flawless portrayal of beauty is so rare that it’s crazy to even imagine that the average girl can look like a supermodel with the right make-up, hair-style, and diet (or lack of food at all if that’s what it takes), no matter how much the people selling those products to us tell us they will.  As young women enter college, they have an opportunity for personal growth. Unlike high school, where judgmental groups of immature adolescents may have shaped  views of the world and self, college is a place where a woman can formulate her own opinions.  So I urge college women to keep these truths in the forefront of their minds during their school experience.  With maturity and education comes room for scrutiny and question.  Everyone has the power to control how they feel about themselves, and there is no reason why anyone should alter their self-esteem for a fallicy that corporations have concocted.

Sunday, December 9, 2012

Final Paper 2: Final Draft


Dear freshman college girl, 


Commercial break!  As Americans, is it nearly impossible to ignore the constant blast of advertisements that are shoved in our faces on a daily basis, and these advertisements usually include a beautiful, flawless woman.  Women love to look at other women and so do men, so its no wonder that a beautiful woman is often used in media to sell products and send out messages, however being a female isn’t easy.  From the moment baby girls open their eyes, they are bombarded with images of beautiful women, and are told that the ideal image of beautiful is what they see in the media.

Throughout history, the ideal image of beauty has been difficult for women to attain.  In the United States today, we are constantly bombarded with images of the “ideal” man or woman, and these images effect us and shape what we come to know as our “generalized other.”  Our generalized other “functions as a sort of monitoring or measuring device with which individuals may judge their own actions against those of their generalized conceptions of how members of society are expected to act.” (Devor, 530) We see the faces in media as a part of this judging device, and we tailor our behaviors and our appearance accordingly.  In our world today, media is one of the main factors that shapes and idealizes our conception of the what we think society expects from us.  As a very young girl I loved to play with Barbies. From their perfect hair and skin, their long legs, flat tummies, and giant breasts, I idolized Barbie and thought that she was perfect.  This is a perfect example of how early this standard of beauty is impressed on little girls, and unfortunately, it never really goes away.  In reality it actually gets worse as girls grow older and feel even more pressure to look attractive.

 Since women are subconsciously comparing themselves to what they see in movies, television shows, magazines, and on billboards and ads, women are striving for an image of beauty that is not realistic and certainly not healthy.  The images portrayed in the media contain attractive females, with bangin’ bodies, beauty, and sex appeal.  In a patriarchal society, it is easy for women to be pressured into placing priority in vanity and appearance, since females in our society have always been told that life is easier when you are attractive, and appearance is extremely important.

As women, we are expected to look good for the opposite sex and can consequently turn themselves into objects for men in this male dominated society, and this can have extreme consequences for girls who compare themselves to Kim Kardashians and Kate Moss looking women that they see in the media.  Shelly Grabe, a professor at the University of Wisconsin stated in her article, "I want to stress that it's totally normal for women to want to be attractive, but what's happening in our society is that many women are striving toward something that's not very realistic or obtainable, and that leads to a lot of health consequences." (Grabe)  In a society with rising rates of obesity and eating disorders, girls face many obstacles to fit into the expectations of our society’s idea of what is attractive and desirable.  The most devastating consequence of our medias skewed portrayal of beauty: the distorted and unrealistic standards females hold themselves to and the consequences they have on girls self-esteem and body image.

The images in media portray extremely beautiful woman in skin-tight and skimpy clothing, with perfect symmetrical faces and rockin’ bodies. Take Cosmopolitan Magazine for example, with a different beautiful bombshells on the cover every month surrounded by sex, dieting, and beauty tips.  The message of the magazine reads loud and clear: stay skinny, always look pretty, and use sex to your advantage.  Girls are pressured to place a high priority on their looks above all else.  This pressure to be obsessed with appearance has devastating effects for many girl’s body image and health.  Women are striving to achieve a weight that is unrealistic for them, which brings me us to the next issue caused by this the unrealistic image of beauty portrayed in our media: negative body image and weight issues.  Jennifer L. Deere, a psychiatrist with a special interest in body image and eating disorders explains, “children exposed to excessive TV viewing, magazines, and movies are at higher risk of obesity. When other variables are controlled, TV exposure independently increases the odds of becoming overweight by 50% for both men and women. Furthermore, the type of exposure, not the amount, is correlated with negative body image. Specifically, rates of exposure to soap operas, movies, and music videos were associated with higher rates of body dissatisfaction and drive for thinness.” 


The current media culture is complicated and very confusing. Women are told that they can and should “have it all.” They expect family, career, and home to be perfect, and Martha Stewart tells them how to do it. The media  them with mixed messages about what is sexy, making it difficult to choose a role model. The heroin chic waif made popular by Kate Moss in the early 1990s competes with the voluptuous Baywatch babe personified by Pamela Anderson and the athletic soccer stars who celebrated a World Cup victory by tearing their shirts off.  Thankfully, Barbie’s designers revamped her figure back in the late 1990s . However, with increased availability of plastic surgery, today’s women are faced with similarly unrealistic expectations every time they open a fashion magazine.
There can be a solution to this problem.  Girls deserve to feel great about themselves and feel beautiful by their own standards, not the ones that corporations portray as beautiful and females are pressured to conform to.  I believe that the solution to this problem is addressing it at an early age.  Children need to learn, both in school and at home, that they do not need to try to achieve unattainable looks and weights that are unhealthy for them in the long run.  Times are changing, and the rain-thin flawless portrayal of beauty is so rare that it’s crazy to even imagine that the average girl can look like a supermodel with the right make-up, hair-style, and diet (or lack of food at all if that’s what it takes).

Monday, November 26, 2012

Rough Draft formal paper #2


How exposure to media effects a woman’s standards of body image

Dear, _________
Women everywhere are being constantly bombarded with images of beautiful, half-naked, skinny “role models” and it is effecting the way that girls view themselves, consequently lowering their self esteem.

In our society today, it is becoming increasingly harder for a woman to fit the standards of what the media portrays as beautiful.  We all want to be seen as attractive, and that’s not a crime, however 

In the United States today, we are constantly bombarded with images of the “ideal” man or woman, and these images effect us and shape what we come to know as our “generalized other.”  Our generalized other “functions as a sort of monitoring or measuring device with which individuals may judge their own actions against those of their generalized conceptions of how members of society are expected to act.” (Devor, 530) In our world today, media is one of the main factors that shapes and idealizes our conception of the “self.” This __?___ particularly effects the females in our society. Since we are subconsciously comparing ourselves to what we see on movies, television shows, magazines, and on billboards and ads everywhere we go.  The images we see contain attractive females, with bangin’ bodies, beauty, and sex appeal.  In our patriarchal society, it is easy for women to be pressured into placing priority in vanity and appearance, since females in our society haven’t exactly been (something about how women were confined to the home and domestic tasks

 Media has created this idea of beauty that we are pressured to conform to, and consequently we learn what is acceptable to be considered beautiful in our society.

As women, we are expected to look good for the opposite sex and essentially turn ourselves into objects for men in this male dominated society, and this can have extreme consequences for girls who compare themselves to the images of women that they see in the media.  Shelly Grabe, a professor at the University of Wisconsin stated, "I want to stress that it's totally normal for women to want to be attractive, but what's happening in our society is that many women are striving toward something that's not very realistic or obtainable, and that leads to a lot of health consequences." (Grabe)  In a society with rising rates of obesity and eating disorders, girls face many obstacles to fit into the expectations of our society’s idea of what is attractive and desirable.  The most devastating consequence of our medias skewed portrayal of beauty: the distorted and unrealistic standards females compare and judge themselves by.  This unrealistic portrayal of beauty in our media greatly effects women in our society to strive to be the rail-think barbies that they see on TV and in magazines.

The images in media portray extremely beautiful woman in skin-tight and skimpy clothing, with perfect symmetrical faces and rockin’ bodies. Take Cosmopolitan Magazine for example, with a different beautiful bombshells on the cover every month surrounded by sex, dieting, and beauty tips.  The message of the magazine reads loud and clear: stay skinny, always look pretty and use sex to your advantage.  Girls are pressured to place a high priority on their looks 

Monday, November 12, 2012

Formal Paper Proposal #2


Topic-  For my second formal paper, I will explore the double standards in American 
culture with regards to gender.  I will focus on dating, hooking up, looks, and gossip.

Exigence: What prompts me to write this paper is the fact that I experience these double standards in my everyday life, and I know that the same is true for my peers.  These double standards, such as difference in treatment of men and women for partaking in the same activities, for example, girls are often labeled as sluts for being promiscuous, while boys are congratulated and praised for hooking up with as many girls as possible.  This difference of treatment from society greatly effects men and women everywhere and the bottom line is that it is completely unfair and wrong.

Claim: Women are treated unequally from men, mainly in regards to sexual encounters and using sexuality to their advantage.  Women seem to be constantly penalized while men are encouraged.

Main Evidence:
The evidence I will use will come from a variety of sources, some research will be done from web articles or magazines, and the rest of it will come from the articles we have read and discussed in class. One quote I will use is from Kimball’s Bros Before Hoes, that says, “ Never listen to a thing a woman is saying, but express immediate and unquenchable sexual interest.”

Sunday, November 4, 2012

RA #3



The Death of Macho by Reihan Salam is a provocative piece about the decline in male dominance and the increasing role of women in positions formerly held by men.  Salam calls it a “monumental shift of power from men to women.” (629)  Salam explains that men have been hit harder by the recession, giving women a chance to climb the economic ladder into more equal paying jobs.  Salam explains, “Although not all countries will respond by throwing the male bums out, the backlash is real - and it is global.  The great shift of power from males to females is likely to be dramatically accelerated by the economic crisis, as more people realize that the aggressive, risk-seeking behavior that has enabled men to entrench their power - the cult of macho - has now proven destructive and unsustainable in a globalized world.” (630)  He is saying that men’s “manly” behavior is not something to be respected or revered, it is actually destructive and has usurped women’s power for too long, and it’s finally time for women to receive the same opportunities, wages, and respect as men.  Salam predicts the outcome of this power switch and investigates the effects that this will have on our infamous “macho men.”  Men will have to either conform or rebel to this new social and economic dynamic.

Salam uses cause and effect to show the huge impact that machoism has had on society and the serious implications of it.  He also explains the effects that this will have on the dynamics of the household and workplace, now that women are climbing up the economic ladder and men are forced to take a step back.  Salam explains that male dominated jobs such as manual labor type of jobs as he refers to as the “housing bubble” are startin got diminish so that female dominated jobs can find a place in the economy.  Salam also quotes US President Obama, he says, “though construction and manufacturing jobs won’t vanish altogether, they will constitute a smaller percentage of the economy.  As a result, women are just as likely to be the primary bread earner, if not more likely, than men are today.” (632)

I really enjoyed reading this article.  I am a working woman and also a full time student, and I completely take care of myself and never dreamed of not making it on my own.  I see that women are taking a greater role in the economy and toward being completely self sufficient, and I intend to support and feed this change by continuing to climb up the ladder to success and show women everywhere that unequal treatment in the job market is absolutely wrong.  I think its about time that someone assigned this type of article in an english class so I could write about it!

Friday, October 26, 2012

Morgan


The first thing that came to my mind when reading From Fly Girls to Bitches and Hoes was that men are obviously not as emotionally, cognatively, and evolutionarily capable to handling everything that women can handle.  It seems that currently in our world, most of the problems that we face are created and perpetuated by men.  From their macho attitudes that have spawned much of the economic mishap in the United States, to the violence around that world that comes from patriarchical societies denying the rights of women and inflicts violence upon them, it’s obvious that men have some serious changing to do. 

This article really opened my eyes to not just the torment and hidden depression behind black men rappers, but of the lacking emotional capacity that almost all men have.  It’s not only black men rappers and “brothas” that purposely discriminate against women to feel like men, but almost ALL men.  White men absolutely partake in the discrimination and patronization of women (maybe using different terminology), and it is just as hurtful to women and society as a whole as derogatory rap music.  

7.  I think that Kimmel and Morgan’s articles are undeniably related.  They both touch on the negative impacts what society expects of males on their emotional and psychological well-being.  Rappers are expected to be violent, get to the top, think of girls as only objects, use toys, technology, and equipment to prove their status and power, never give up, partake in risky behavior, and show no emotion.  Kimball describes being manly as almost exactly the same thing.  When I read these two articles, even though one is written about men in general and one is speaking specifically about black rappers, in my mind there really is not a whole lot of difference.  Men are men.  We are living in the 21st Century and I truly think that race, when pertaining to this matter, is pretty irrelevant.  Men everywhere are forced to hide their emotions.  I can’t even imagine what would happen if women were told that they needed to supress their emotions and act tough like nothing could hurt them.  We would all go crazy and our heads would explode! Women may have more hormones than men, but when it comes to emotions, I think we are more alike than any man would like to admit.  We all have feelings and for one gender to supress their feelings while another feels comfortable expressing them can only lead to disaster.  I think that this is the root cause for a lot of problems in the world.  In Bros Before Hoes, Kimball states that men fear that they will be seen as gay if they show emotions, and I think it’s a very true battle that many men face.  The funny thing is, that if these men that say they’re straight were to actually open up to a woman about their true feelings, a woman would probably find it admirable and love them even more.  Kimball also says that men only seek the confirmation of other men, but doesn’t THAT seem a little bit more gay than expressing your emotions?