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Jean Kilbourne Two Ways A Woman Can Get Hurt Analysis

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For many years now, the primary medium for advertisements has been television. A majority of society has access to a TV, and because of this reality, producers promote their products via this media outlet. However, are these companies just trying to sell their products? or they also advocate their personal agendas upon the masses. Throughout history, the various media channels have influenced society to believe or accept twisted fallacies. For instance, we assume that crime and violence are running rampant because the News primarily covers violent and criminal activities. However, the reality is crime and violence has been on a steep decline since the 1990’s. Still, the optimal way these shows receive good ratings and views is through headlining …show more content…

the author, Jean Kilbourne, EdD, states that, “Sex in advertising is pornographic because it dehumanizes and objectifies people, especially women, and because it fetisheizes products, imbues them with an erotic charge…” (491). Kilbourne also believes the sexualization of ads promotes violence against women; she presents the example of an Italian Vogue ad, which displayed a man pointing a gun at a naked woman wrapped in plastic, and a purse covering her face (497). I believe if Kilbourne were to view and respond to the Victoria’s Secret, she might say the commercial, demoralizes and objectifies women, focus heavily on sexual intimacy rather than emotional, and promotes a sense violence against women. Additionally, in the essay, From Multicultural Barbie and the Merchandising of Difference, the author, Ann DuCille, a former chair and director of the center for African American Studies at Wesleyan University, discussed that the multicultural Barbie, though created to encourage diversity and racial awareness of other cultures and ethnicities, it promotes racism by excluding true cultural and ethnic characteristics from each multicultural Barbie (859). She further explains that doll advocates an ideal body image of, “mythically thin, long-legged, luxuriously haired, buxom beauty…” which in turn might result in younger girls trying to mimic the Barbie lifestyle or image rather than, being at peace with their own self. Not to mention the fact the multicultural Barbies are simply white dolls with different shades of color, and exclude cultural character traits (861). I believe if DuCille saw the Victoria’s Secret ad, she would feel the ad excludes a good representation of all ethnicities, because throughout the entire advertisement there was only one African American model, but she was only shown for a mere two seconds. And DuCille might feel the “perfect”, tall, petite, and caucasian females encourage a practicable standard for

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