Wednesday, September 18, 2019
Female Stereotypes In The Media Essay -- Papers
 Female Stereotypes In The Media            In the media the most common female stereotypes, are the housewife and     the blonde bimbo.       The Housewife. Chained to the kitchen sink, always cleaning and     cooking. An old stereotype.       In the advertisement for Shake `n Vac a woman is doing the vacuuming     and dancing around shaking Shake `n' Vac on the floor. This is a     stereotype for the reason that a man is nowhere to be found. But in     advertisements for intelligent matters like finance, it's always a     man.       At first, when I saw the advertisement for Mc Cain's chips, I thought     the woman in it wasn't stereotypical, as she was not cooking the meal,     the man was. But after a while I saw that this was just for a joke, as     at the end you saw that the man was only able to cook a tray of oven     chips and he doesn't even know whether they have a chip pan or not, as     the dialogue goes, Man: à ´I spent ages making these chips, slicing the     potatoes, frying them in the chip panà  .à ¶ Woman: à ´What chip pan?à ¶       The Mirror's cartoon section has had a cartoon that's been there for     years and years called Andy Capp. (See picture A)This cartoon follows     the life of a stereotypical northern husband and wife. In the edition     I looked at, there's a picture of Andy's wife carrying a bucket and a     cloth, walking into the kitchen, blanking the husband whose lying on a     couch nearby. He asks à ´What's the matter pet? Is it something I did? à ¶     And she shouts back à ´How? When's the last time you did anything?à ¶ In     all of the cartoons, Andy never did any housework, as far as he was     concerned that was women's work and he always expected his dinner to     be on the table when he came home from ...              ... like in the     advertisement for shake and vac.       The reason why stereotypes exists are usually because when people make     up characters (for TV scripts, film scripts, etc.) it's easier to use     the image of a woman that someone is familiar with. Most writers are     male. As they don't know much about them and they can only write about     what they know about, they have to use the images they have of women     in their heads. It's the same with other stereotypes, i.e. French     people in the media always wear berets and have onions round their     necks.       When will our views change completely? I think, although new     stereotypes are appearing and old ones are evolving, it will take     time. But the women will always be portrayed, because they're the     child bearers, as being chained to the kitchen sink and planning what     to have for dinner.                        
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