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Gender, Culture, and Media

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Other media includes billboards, magazines, radios, newspapers, books. In 1991, Playboy, had 3,488,006 subscribers while Newsweek had 3,211,958. Themes in Media ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Gender, Culture, and Media


1
Gender, Culture, and Media
  • Media reflect cultural values
  • Nearly all Americans (98.3) own a tv.
  • Well over half own VCRs.
  • 60.2 subscribed to cable.
  • 89 to 94 of the American population watch tv on
    any given day.

2
  • Other media includes billboards, magazines,
    radios, newspapers, books.
  • In 1991, Playboy, had 3,488,006 subscribers while
    Newsweek had 3,211,958

3
Themes in Media
  • Underrepresentation of women.
  • Stereotyped presentation of men and women.
  • Men are portrayed as aggressive, dominant, and
    engaged in exciting activities.
  • Media have created 2 images of women good women
    and bad ones.

4
  • Stereotypical images of relationships between men
    and women.
  • Womens dependence/Mens independence
  • Mens authority/womens incompetence
  • Women as primary caregivers/men as caretakers.
  • Women as victims and sex objects/men as
    aggressors.

5
Implications of Media Representation of gender
  • Fostering unrealistic and limited gender ideals.
    Images of men and women are unrealistic.
  • Research suggests that the unrealistic ideals in
    popular media do influence how we feel about
    ourselves and our relationships.

6
  • For adolescents, radio is a major influence, with
    the average listening time being 5 hours/day.
  • Readers of self-help books experienced more than
    typical amounts of frustration and disappointment
    when their relationships failed to meet the
    ideals promoted by media.

7
Gender comparisons in social and personality
  • Social constructionist explanation
  • We construct or invent our own versions of
    reality, based on prior experiences in our
    culture.
  • Everyday we construct what it means to be male
    and female.

8
Factors influencing social/ personality gender
difference
  • Gender differences are largest when behavior is
    measured in terms of self-report. (women are more
    likely than men to report nurturance)
  • Gender differences are largest when other people
    are present (women react () when others are
    nearby)

9
  • Gender differences are largest when gender is
    prominent and other shared roles are minimized.
    In a singles bar, gender is emphasized.
  • Gender differences are largest when the behavior
    requires specific gender-related skills. Men
    might be especially likely to offer to change a
    tire.

10
Communication patterns
  • Verbal communication
  • Talkativeness Males are typically more
    talkative, based on data gathered in elementary
    classrooms, college classrooms, and college
    students conversations.
  • In the study by Spender (1989) of faculty
    conversations, men spoke 58 to 75 of the time.

11
  • Language style Men use more slang.
  • In conversations with men, women use disclaimers
    or tag questions.
  • The most popular topics for both men and women
    were work and money.
  • Women talked about men about 4 times as much as
    men talked about women.
  • Men were more likely to talk about hobbies.

12
Percentage of time females/ males discussed 5
topics.
13
Non-verbal communication
  • Personal space
  • Invisible border around each person that other
    people must not invade during ordinary social
    interactions.
  • Females approach closer to others than males do.
  • People are especially likely to approach closely
    to females rather than males.

14
  • Body posture
  • Women look more tense men appear more relaxed.
  • Men and women walk differently.

15
  • Touch
  • 2 women touch more than 2 men.
  • Mixed dyads showed Hall Veccia (1990) no
    overall differences but in older couples, women
    touched men more and in younger couples, men
    touched women more.
  • Hall (1996) found no overall gender differences
    among professionals (psychology/philosophy)
    however if of equal status, male touch more.

16
  • Gaze
  • Females gaze more at their conversational
    partners.
  • People gaze more at females than males.

17
  • Facial expressions
  • Women smile more than men.
  • The smiles of women are due to social tension

18
  • Decoding ability
  • The ability to figure out from another persons
    nonverbal behavior, what that person is feeling.
  • Women are more likely than men to decode
    nonverbal expressions from facial expression.
  • This is evident as early as elementary school.
  • This is true cross-culturally.

19
  • Decoding from vocal cues
  • Women more accurate at decoding voices that
    expressed fear, happiness, and sadness.
  • There was no gender difference for anger.

20
  • Potential explanations for gender differences in
    communication
  • Power and social status Gender differences in
    the area of communication is due to power and
    status.
  • Social learning Gender differences are due to
    roles, expectations, and socialization
    experiences. Children are then reinforced for
    using the appropriate gender response.

21
Characteristics related to helping and caring.
  • Altruism
  • Providing unselfish help to others who are in
    need without anticipating any reward.
  • Some studies show men morel likely than women to
    offer unsolicited help.
  • When someone asked for help there were no gender
    differences.
  • Gender differences depend on the nature of the
    task and the nature of the request.

22
  • Nurturance
  • the kind of helping in which someone gives care
    to another person.
  • Women describe themselves as more nurturing but
    are equally responsive to the needs of others
    (especially babies)
  • The social situation (whether alone or in public)
    influences displays of nurture. In public,
    people act according to the socially constructed
    ideal women get excited, men yawn.

23
  • Empathy
  • Empathy is feeling the same emotion as another
    person.
  • Gender differences when based on self-report
    women more empathic than men.

24
  • Moral judgments
  • Kohlbergs theory
  • Gilligans theory 2 approaches to moral decision
    making.
  • Justice perspective
  • Care perspective
  • Clopton and Sorell (1993) found no gender
    differences

25
  • Friendship
  • Gender similarities when assessing what friends
    do when they get together. Both are likely to
    just talk
  • Self-disclosure revealing information about
    yourself to someone else.
  • Women value self-disclosure somewhat more than
    men.
  • Cross-racial friendships are rare.

26
  • Aggression and power
  • Aggression is a male characteristic.
  • Lepowsky (1998) reports on aggression in an
    egalitarian culture. In a culture that
    discourages aggression, gender differences may
    disappear.
  • Harris (1994) on gangs, reports on a subculture
    that admires aggression, do not show gender
    differences.

27
  • Research on aggression shows
  • Gender differences are relatively large in
    children.
  • Gender differences are large for physical
    aggression.
  • Women are capable of violence and it has been
    rising over the years.

28
  • Gender differences are large when based on
    self-report.
  • Gender differences are small when aggression is
    provoked.
  • Gender differences are small when the perpetrator
    or victim of aggression is anonymous.

29
  • Disadvantages of the myth of the non-aggressive
    female
  • Women see themselves as weak.
  • Women may be denied access to professions that
    value competition.
  • Aggressive men may be seen as normal
  • A double-standard for punishment in the criminal
    system.

30
  • Assertiveness
  • The ability to stand up for ones rights.
  • No gender differences.
  • Leadership
  • Males emerge as leaders
  • Characteristics of female leaders
  • High in achievement style
  • No discomfort in using power

31
  • Performance as leaders
  • In laboratory research, men are more concerned
    about getting the job done women are more
    concerned about the feelings of others. When
    analyze people employed as leaders, gender
    similarities.
  • Leadership style
  • Democratic allow others to have input
  • Autocratic decision made by leader
  • Gender differences were small but women more
    democratic and men more autocratic.

32
  • Males and females are equally effective.
  • Persuasion
  • Men most persuaded by women when women used
    tentative language and not persuaded by women who
    used assertive language.
  • Women were persuaded by another woman using
    assertive language.
  • A male audience was significantly more influenced
    by a man who used a competent style(rapid speech,
    upright posture, calm hand gestures)

33
  • rather than a women who used a competent style.
  • A competent women finds herself in a bind.
  • Influencibility
  • No gender differences.
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