Objectification Essay

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    Sexual Objectification in Music Videos and How Adolescents Are Affected Lauren Faron, Aynsley Fishel, Nisha Patel, & Menelik Solomon The Ohio State University Music videos are easily accessible to everyone, especially adolescents. From its earliest origins on TV to recent upgrades to technology on the internet, such as YouTube, anyone can watch music videos at any time of the day. Online music video sites draw an average of 150 million people each month who view more than two

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    Though Kant and MacKinnon/Dworkin have some strong differences, they also have a few important similarities. One essential concept that the three thinkers agree on, are the three components that define sexual objectification: instrumentalization, denial of autonomy, and subjectivity. By sexually objectifying someone, the objectifier uses her for their own purposes, while denying her wishes, and treating her as if what she’s experiencing doesn’t matter. Kant and MacKinnon/Dworkin agree that all human

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    behavior of many women is to engage in making their bodies sexually attractive to men at the expense of their own expectations. See your own body and the bodies of other women as male sexual desire is part of the self-objectification process. According to the documentary, the objectification is to disregard psychological and emotional attributes that characterize us as individuals. Women who self-objectifies not fully understand as an individual and not realize all its capabilities and possibilities,

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    Comparing Tragedies: Echo vs. Narcissus Ovid displays an impressive grasp of language in his poem Narcissus and Echo which allows him to address many classic themes, the chief of these being the theme of unfulfilled love and the suffering it brings. The most notable instances of this type of suffering are Echo and Narcissus’ transformations; Echo withers away until she is naught but a voice, and Narcissus is trapped in place until he eventually transforms into a flower. Upon finishing this tale

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    In a world populated by people who are driven by sexual desire, pornography is inevitable. Throughout history, erotic work has progressed alongside society, and has climaxed, it seems, in the information age with almost unlimited access to any manner of pornographical work on the internet. In most forms, Pornography is legal within the United States, and is widely used despite its taboo nature. While statistics differ, it is likely that a majority of Americans have used pornography, and the industry

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    In Tibor Kalman’s propaganda poster “Chicken”, the author conveys the severity of sexual objectification and consequences of commercialization of sex in various ways. In this poster, there is a pack of “CHICKEN” with “Great legs and Nice Breast” that are ready to be sold. The piece of art explicitly delivers the author’s message by comparing women as a pack of chicken, which is a typical consumer product that is widely accessible. Through this poster, Kalman specifically targets misogynists who treat

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    Companies have been using advertisements in magazines as means of marketing for many decades now. While the purpose for ads, which is to get the consumer to buy their products, is seemingly obvious. Most of the messages that ads are sending are being received to the viewer’s subconscious mind. As Jean Kilbourne touches upon in her documentary Killing Us Softly 4, ads not only tell us what we need to buy, they tell us who we are (Killbourne, 2010). The specific ad I will be analyzing is an ad that

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    The 1950s and the 1960s were a crucial stage for the feminist movement, a stage were women sought to find their rights and be whatever they wanted to be instead of what the society ought them to be. It is important we discuss the changes that have happened throughout time to see if we at all have improved, and how far we still have to go in this day and age. This topic is of special interest to me seeing as I love editorial and the printed media, whilst I am also a strong believer in equal rights

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    empathy, making sexual aggression terribly common. In Kilbourne’s article she says, “all women are vulnerable in a culture in which there is such widespread objectification of women’s bodies, such glorification of disconnection and so much violence against women” (455). She is right on the mark when expressing the correlation between objectification and violence. The way our society dehumanizes women directly links the violence the women of our culture must endure. Tom Ford’s next disturbing advertisement

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    morality of objectification – particulary whether objectification can be a moral good, is always a moral bad, or the moral question cannot be adequately answered using Psycological Egoism. After outlining Stoltenberg’s stance on objectification, I will start with the basic assumption that there are good actions and evil actions. I will also assume the premise that all objectification (including sexual objectification) is wrong. I will then explore Psycological Egoism’s effect on objectification. Lastly

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