[Wamvan] New Report: "Gender Inequality in Popular Films"
Lindsay Miles
lindskmiles at gmail.com
Sun Nov 27 11:49:20 PST 2011
FYI
Gender Inequality in Popular Films: Examining On Screen Portrayals and
Behind-the-Scenes Employment Patterns in Motion Pictures Released between
2007-2009
Submitted by asklar <http://www.ncrw.org/users/asklar> on Wed, 11/23/2011 -
11:05am
A new study by USC Annenberg researchers Stacy
Smith<http://annenberg.usc.edu/Faculty/Communication%20and%20Journalism/SmithS.aspx>,
Marc
Choueitiand Stephanie Gall surveys the top 100 grossing movies of 2009 and
shows Hollywood's addiction to films that marginalize and sexualize women
is as strong as ever.
The study, "Gender Inequality in Popular Films," can be found
here<http://annenberg.usc.edu/Faculty/Communication%20and%20Journalism/~/media/4F2F5F5CD74C43948A7D245CC421714B.ashx>
(PDF).
Perhaps most troubling were the findings about young teen characters.
Professor Smith and her research team of undergraduate students found the
same prevalence of sexually revealing clothing and partial nudity in female
characters in all age groups from 13 to 39. In fact, 13- to 20-year-olds
were just as likely as 21- to 29-year-olds to be depicted that way.
The survey found 33.8 percent of female teen characters were seen in sexy
clothing, and 28.2 percent were shown with exposed skin in the cleavage,
midriff or upper thigh regions. For male teen characters, the numbers were
drastically lower – 5.3 percent shown in sexy clothing and 11.2 percent
showing skin.
Sexualizing a significant portion of women this age may contribute to males
viewing girls and women as "eye candy" at younger and younger ages, Smith
said.
"Viewing sexualized images of females in film may contribute to
self-objectification in some girls or women, which – in turn – may increase
body shame, appearance anxiety and have other negative effects," she said.
Elsewhere, Smith's team found numbers that echo a discouraging trend
revealed in her studies of movies from 2007 and 2008.
They examined 4,342 speaking characters in 2009 movies, including *Transformers
2*, *Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince*, *The Twilight Saga New Moon*,
*Up* and *The Hangover*.
*Of the speaking characters, 32.8 percent were women and 67.2 percent were
men. That equals 2.05 males for every female. The percentage was identical
to movies of 2008.
*Less than 17 percent of films were gender-balanced, meaning they featured
girls or women in 45 to 54.9 percent of speaking roles. Those findings were
similar to the previous two years; only 15 percent were gender-balanced in
2008 and 12 percent in 2007.
"The infrequency of females in film is symptomatic of a greater industry
issue," Choueiti said. "Our data show that females are simply not equal in
film, in front of or behind the camera.Yet, females control a vast majority
of the purchasing decisions in the home and buy roughly half of the tickets
at the box office. Hollywood is failing to court one of its most
financially lucrative audiences."
And unfortunately, the unchanged numbers – a lack of gender-balanced movies
and women behind the camera – year after year reveal a "norm"
in Hollywood that is damaging to women. It's almost as if the stats reveal
a industry formula regarding gender, Smith said.
"It's completely consistent: there are about 4,300 characters across 100
films per year, and under a third are female. There's a remarkable
stability. It becomes normative without some content creators even thinking
about it. It's a status quo."
*The report is part of a survey conducted yearly by Stacy Smith and Marc
Choueiti on the top 100 domestic films.*
>From the press release<http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/usc-annenberg-study-hollywood-hooked-on-sexualizing-women-and-teen-girls-134267078.html>
.
URL:
http://annenberg.usc.edu/Faculty/Communication%20and%20Journalism/~/media/4F2F5F5CD74C43948A7D245CC421714B.ashx
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