CS322 Lecture 7: CS322 WEEK SEVEN
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Women dai(cid:374)ty, (cid:272)ute, pretty, passi(cid:448)e, you(cid:374)g a(cid:374)d attra(cid:272)ti(cid:448)e, (cid:862)(cid:271)ossy(cid:863: more pleasurable to watch, catch attention of audience / viewers. Male / female news anchors female can be corrected male is authority (tv) Throughout the (cid:1005)96(cid:1004)s to prese(cid:374)t day, there ha(cid:448)e (cid:271)ee(cid:374) a (cid:448)ariety of (cid:272)o(cid:374)(cid:272)er(cid:374) of (cid:449)o(cid:373)e(cid:374)"s presence in journalism and how journalism portrays media and the feminism movement. These are fairly ingrained stereotypes that find many outlets, including journalism. Questions about representation are reflected in the idea that media is impartial of the society that we live in: our society has numerous inequalities. Feminist concerns of print / broadcast media fall into three categories: 1) stereotypical portrayals of women: Mothers, sex objects, linking them to the home: (cid:1006)) la(cid:272)k of (cid:449)o(cid:373)e(cid:374)"s represe(cid:374)tatio(cid:374) i(cid:374) the i(cid:374)dustry: Questions of political economy, look at media industries. What political economy does in many ways is tries to decentre the media.