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Gender : Objectification Of Women, Emotional Literacy And Gender Roles

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Analysis of Gender: Objectification of Women, Emotional Literacy and Gender Roles Introduction Gender in American society is a hot topic right now on many levels. The spotlight on how women have been portrayed in our culture now shines on the negative messages being taken to heart and embodied by our women. These are the very same images and messages being taken in by our men, to the continued detriment of our women. As a nation we have seen the blossoming of the darker, destructive aspects of masculinity, with the very people elected to run our country leading the charge, reducing many of our national ideals to their lowest common denominator instead of exemplifying a more enlightened ideology for our future. Society had just …show more content…

Women are portrayed as objects, something to be owned, used and thrown away, with their primary value based on the sexual gratification of men (Wright & Tokunaga, 2016). Women in American society are expected to conform to the standards of beauty outlined in advertising, even though those images are unnatural and enhanced through Photoshop. Social media shows videos of how the photo of a real model, with all her natural beauty and flaws, is manipulated; the flaws erased, eyes unrealistically enlarged, thighs reduced and cellulite smoothed away. The direct effect of objectification on women in our society has already been linked to an increase in eating disorders such as anorexia and bulimia. The images of women in advertising are role models real women can never live up to, and these unrealistic ideals have become the standard by which men measure women. Watson, Marszalek, Dispenza and Davids (2015) conducted a study on the effect of objectification on African American and White women in an attempt to compare/contrast the experiences of objectification on women, concentrating on two extremes of the racial dynamic in our society. The results of the research showed the increase in anxiety, depression and psychological distress, including fear of assault/rape, reported by the women included in the study in response to the continual sexual harassment these women experienced. It also noted that African American women experienced these effects at a much higher

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