Tuesday, 24 May 2011

City of God context material

City of God context material
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Causes of violence in Rio de Janeiro are multi-faceted. High levels of inequality and physical, social and economic exclusion from the formal system are some of the principle causes. This combines with cultural factors such as machismo and the draw of perceived higher social status and identity through joining gangs. The availability of guns, cocaine and the marijuana industry exacerbates the problem. The lack of an integrated public security strategy coupled with a violent and corrupt police, and a judiciary and prison system which is ineffective, are also contributing factors. The political and economic history of Brazil has played a part: the transition from dictatorship to democracy; rapid and unplanned urbanization; and shifts in labour market requirements to higher skill levels to meet new demands, resulting in high unemployment and frustration felt by those with some education but insufficient to secure a job in the formal economy.

Perpetrators and victims of armed violence in Rio de Janeiro are primarily the police, drug traffickers (mainly young men of 14-29 years old), and civilians caught in the crossfire. Favelas1 are the main locations of gun violence but criminal violence does occur in other parts of the city. The principle type of armed violence is organised drug gang fighting for territorial control; police use of arms; armed robbery and petty crime.

Conclusions in relation to armed violence and poverty / social exclusion in Rio:
Rio is one of the wealthiest cities in Brazil. However the extreme inequality and social exclusion of a significant proportion of the population stands out as one of the major fault lines and a cause of violence.

The presence of firearms, especially amongst drug traffickers in favelas is the biggest cause of firearm homicide.

The residents of favelas are stigmatized both in terms of location of residence and colour.

The favelas are illegal settlements which have made the state largely ignore them as areas of the city. This lack of state presence has made them more susceptible to the de facto control by drug factions, which in turn makes it harder for development to take place and limits outsiders entering, whether these are businesses or development/violence control or prevention projects.

In terms of income, the residents of favelas are not necessarily below the poverty line. However their relative poverty lies in their vulnerability and social exclusion.

In 1995 the city of Rio spent 5 per cent of GDP on combating violence (excluding private security).

The most relevant MDG in relation to Rio is education (63 per cent of favela residents in the Municipality of Rio have not achieved a primary certificate – i.e. less than 8 years of education).

The culture of machismo creates a climate in which violence is seen as a norm, contributing to incidents of violence. This is evident in the prevalence of domestic violence against women and men’s desire to join drug gangs, seeing guns as a source of power and identity.
Favelas are often built on environmentally protected land, which used to be forests. They are characteristically on steep slopes above the city, which makes them vulnerable to mud slides in heavy rain. This adds to the legislative difficulty of granting the land to the residents legally.

Partnerships for development need to be built in the context of Brazil and Rio. Partnerships need to be built with the multiple public security forces, which do not have an integrated policy to combat violence.

1 A favela is defined by Rio city government’s complementary law no. 16 of 1992, as: “A predominantly residential area, characterized by occupation of the land by low-income populations, precariousness of urban infrastructure and public services, narrow and irregularly aligned roads or passage-ways, plots of irregular form and size, and unlicensed constructions that do not conform to legal standards”.

Thursday, 19 May 2011

Women and Soaps overview

Women and Soaps

Institutional Perspective
Backbone of the schedule
Highly popular genre
Public Service – framework

Genric Textual Features
In general soaps are characterized by:
  1. serial form which resists narrative closure; * (further discussion of narrative later)
  2. multiple characters and plots;
  3. use of time which parallels actual time and implies that the action continues to take place whether we watch it or not;
  4. abrupt segmentation between parts;
  5. emphasis on dialogue, problem solving, and intimate conversation;
  6. many of the male characters portrayed as 'sensitive men';
  7. the home, or some other place which functions as a home, is the setting for the show.


Soap as Trash
Soap operas have  been characterized in dominant discourse by their excesses—
too much talk, too much emotion, too little action,  too much romance,  too many plots, too many characters, too simple,  too little social commentary, too ordinary.

However, despite the universal disdain heaped upon them, soap operas are immensely popular with women. (and some men)


Why are soaps popular with women?

Consider why they are called soaps

Their unique narrative structure
·         It refuses closure,
  • contains non-hierarchical and multiple plots and characters,
  • features a balanced point of view
  • omniscient narration

Gossip
·         They prioritise dialogue over action
·         Rely on gossip within the text
·         Creates gossip outside the text

Why do Women watch soaps

Christine Geraghty has tried to explain why soap has such a strong appeal for women.


A central female character with whom the audience are encouraged to identify.


An acknowledgement of the importance of the domestic sphere in people’s lives.


An emphasis on the importance of relationships


The privileging of fantasy linked to the private sphere.


A cultural space of their own.

A range of representations of women within soap


In Coronation Street 54% of the cast are women and 48 % of the cast are women in Eastenders.
Coronation Street has a wide range of women in terms of age – 15% being over 65.
The range of occupations in British Soap for women are very limited. 90% of character occupations are in the C2 – E social stratification. We can argue there fore that women are less objectified in Soap but are Symbolically Annihilated.




Soap Opera - detailed

What is a soap opera?
The soap opera genre originated in American radio serials of the 1930s, and owes the name to the sponsorship of some of these programmes by major soap powder companies. So, like many television genres (e.g. news and quiz shows), the soap opera is a genre originally drawn from radio rather than film.
Television soap operas are long-running serials concerned with everyday life. The serial is not to be confused with the series, in which the main characters and format remain the same from programme to programme but each episode is a self-contained plot. In a serial at least one storyline is carried over from one episode to the next. A series is advertised as having a specific number of episodes, but serials are potentially endless.
Successful soaps may continue for many years: so new viewers have to be able to join in at any stage in the serial. In serials, the passage of time also appears to reflect 'real time' for the viewers: in long-running soaps the characters age as the viewers do. Christine Geraghty (1991, p. 11) notes that 'the longer they run the more impossible it seems to imagine them ending.' There are sometimes allusions to major topical events in the world outside the programmes.

Soaps compared with other genres
One related genre is the melodrama, with which it shares such features as moral polarization, strong emotions, female orientation, unlikely coincidences, and excess. Another related genre is the literary romance, with which it shares features such as simplified characters, female orientation and episodic narrative. However, soaps do not share with these forms the happy ending or the idealized characters. British soaps are distinctively different from these related genres in their debt to a social realist tradition (e.g. 'kitchen sink' dramas) and an emphasis on contemporary social problems.
Some media theorists distinguish between styles of TV programmes which are broadly 'masculine' or 'feminine'. Those seen as typically masculine include action/adventure programmes and Westerns; those seen as more 'feminine' include soaps and sitcoms. Action-adventures define men in relation to power, authority, aggression and technology. Soap operas define women in relation to a concern with the family. The relative 'openness' of soaps in comparison with other genres will be discussed shortly.

Subject-matter and style
Recurrent events in soap opera include courtships, marriages, divorces, deaths and disappearances. Gossip is a key feature in soaps (usually absent from other genres): in part it acts as a commentary on the action. Geraghty notes that 'more frequently than other TV genres, soaps feature women characters normally excluded by their age, appearance or status' (1991, p. 17).
Broadcast serials have the advantage of a regular time-slot (often more than once a week), but even if some viewers miss it they can easily catch up with events. Any key information which might have been missed is worked into the plot when necessary. Nevertheless knowledge of previous events can usefully be brought to bear by habitual viewers, and doing so is part of the pleasure of viewing for them. Viewers are also in an omniscient position, knowing more than any character does. The form is unique in offering viewers the chance to engage in informed speculation about possible turn of events.
Unlike a play or a series there is always a wide range of characters in a soap opera (which means that no single character is indispensible). The large cast and the possibility of casual viewers necessitates rapid characterization and the use of recognizable 'types'. British and Australian soaps which are not in 'prime-time' slots typically operate on a small budget.
Soaps are frequently derided by some critics for being full of clichés and stereotypes, for having shoddy sets, for being badly acted, trivial, predictable and so on. Soap viewers (often assumed to be only women, and in particular working-class housewives) are characterized unfairly as naive escapists. Given the great popularity of the genre, such criticisms can be seen as culturally elitist. Robert Allen (1992, p. 112) argues that to emphasize what happens when in soaps (in semiotic terms the syntagmatic dimension) is to underestimate the equal importance of who relates this to whom (the paradigmatic dimension). Certainly relationships are more important than plot.

The openness of soaps
Some feminist theorists have argued that soap operas spring from a feminine aesthetic, in contrast to most prime-time TV. Soaps are unlike traditional dramas (e.g. sit-coms) which have a beginning, a middle and an end: soaps have no beginning or end, no structural closure. They do not build up towards an ending or closure of meaning. Viewers can join a soap at any point. There is no single narrative line: several stories are woven together over a number of episodes. In this sense the plots of soaps are not linear.
The structure of soaps is complex and there is no final word on any issue. A soap involves multiple perspectives and no consensus: ambivalence and contradiction is characteristic of the genre. There is no single 'hero' (unlike adventures, where the preferred reading involves identification with this character), and the wide range of characters in soaps offers viewers a great deal of choice regarding those with which they might identify. All this leaves soaps particularly open to individual interpretations (more than television documentaries, suggests David Buckingham 1987, p. 36).
Tania Modleski (1982) argues that the structural openness of soaps is an essentially 'feminine' narrative form. She argues that pleasure in narrative focuses on closure, whilst soaps delay resolution and make anticipation an end in itself. She also argues that masculine narratives 'inscribe' in the text an implied male reader who becomes increasingly omnipotent whilst the soap has 'the ideal mother' as inscribed reader. Narrative interests are diffused among many characters and her power to resolve their problems is limited. The reader is the mother as sympathetic listener to all sides.
Easthope argues that the masculine ego favours forms which are self-contained, and which have a sense of closure. 'Masculine' narrative form favours action over dialogue and avoids indeterminacy to arrive at closure/resolution. It is linear and goal-oriented. Soaps make consequences more important than actions, involve many complications, and avoid closure. Dialogue in masculine narratives is driven by plot which it explains, clarifies and simplifies. In soaps dialogue blurs and delays. There is no single hero in soaps, no privileged moral perspective, multiple narrative lines (non-linear plot) and few certainties. Viewers tend to feel involved interpreting events from the perspective of characters similar to themselves or to those they know.
Not much seems to 'happen' in many soaps (by comparison with, say, an action series or an adventure serial) because there is little rapid action. In soaps such as Coronation Street and Brookside what matters is the effect of events on the characters, This is revealed through characters talking to each other. Charlotte Brunsdon argues that the question guiding a soap story is not 'What will happen next?' but 'What kind of person is this?' (in Geraghty 1991, p. 46). Such a form invites viewers to offer their own comments.

Realism
Viewers differ in the extent to which they judge soaps as 'reflections of reality'. Whilst American soaps such as Dallas and Dynasty are seen (at least by British viewers) as largely in the realms of fantasy, British soaps are more often framed by viewers in terms of 'realism'. However, it is misleading to regard even 'realist soaps' as simply 'representing real life'. The representation of 'reality' is not unproblematic: television is not a 'window' on an objective and unmediated world. British soap operas are often described as 'realistic', but what this means varies. There are several philosophical positions underlying people's assumptions about the nature of 'reality':
§  Realism: The world has an objective existence which is independent of our use of any means of representation. An attempt to represent the world in words or images may 'distort reality', but at its best can 'mirror reality'.
§  Relativism: We unavoidably contribute to 'the construction of reality' - of the world - in our use of words and images. We do this within cultural frameworks (Stanley Fish refers to 'interpretive communities'), so realities are not entirely personal and unconstrained.
§  Idealism: 'Reality' (or 'the world') is purely subjective and is constructed by human interpretation, having no independent objective existence.
'Common-sense' theories tend to be 'realist' theories in this philosophical sense. Philosophical realism is involved when viewers consider soaps in terms of the extent to which they offer a 'distorted image of reality' of 'the outside world' (Ang calls this empiricist realism on the part of viewers). From the perspective of the programme makers, documentary realism (Colin MacCabe calls this classic realism in the case of the novel) involves foregrounding the story and backgrounding the use of the conventions of the medium (e.g. using 'invisible editing'). This 'transparency' of style encourages viewers to regard the programme as a 'window' on an apparently unmediated world rather than to notice its constructedness. Realism in drama is no less a set of conventions than any other style, and it serves to mask whose realities are being presented. 'Transparency' is associated with a close sense of involvement by the viewers. It is found in most soaps, although in American soaps such as Dallas and Dynasty lapses into implausibility may tend to distance the viewer.
British soaps also employ the transparency of classic/ documentary realism, but owe a great deal to the social realist tradition (associated with late 50s British films and kitchen-sink dramas). Social realism emphasizes 'relevance' - a sympathetic portrayal of everyday social problems recognizable to the working class (see Jordan, in Dyer 1981, p. 28). Plausibility and credibility is also valued more than in American prime-time soaps. Geraghty suggests that 'British soaps, because of their greater dependence on realism, are less daring [than US soaps] in displaying their own fictionality' (1991, p. 20).
John Fiske (in Seiter et al. 1989, p. 68) notes that minimal post-production work on 'realist' soaps (leaving in 'dead' bits) may be cost-cutting, but it also suggests more 'realism' than in heavily edited programmes, suggesting the 'nowness' of the events on screen. Published stories about the characters in soaps and the actors who play them link the world of the soap with the outside world, but they also allow viewers to treat the soap as a kind of game.
Ien Ang (1985) argues that watching soaps involves a kind of psychological realism for the viewer: an emotional realism which exists at the connotative rather than denotative (content) level. This offers less concrete, more 'symbolic representations of more general living experiences' which viewers find recognizably 'true to life' (even if at the denotative level the treatment seems 'unrealistic'). In such a case, 'what is recognized as real is not knowledge of the world, but a subjective experience of the world: a "structure of feeling"' (Ang 1985, p. 45). For many viewers of Dallas this was a tragic structure of feeling: evoking the idea that happiness is precarious.
I would argue that especially with long-running soaps (which may become more 'real' to their fans over time) what we could call dramatic realism is another factor. Competence in judging this is not confined to professional critics. Viewers familiar with the characters and conventions of a particular soap may often judge the programme largely in its own terms (or perhaps in terms of the genre) rather than with reference to some external 'reality'. For instance, is a character's current behaviour consistent with what we have learnt over time about that character? The soap may be accepted to some extent as a world in its own right, in which slightly different rules may sometimes apply. This is of course the basis for the 'willing suspension of disbelief' on which drama depends.
Producers sometimes remark that realistic drama offers a slice of life with the duller bits cut out, and that long-running soaps are even more realistic than other forms because less has to be excluded. However, dramatists do more than produce shortened versions of 'the film of life': the construction of reality is far more complex than this, and whose life is it anyway?

Stereotypes
Jordan (in Dyer 1981) identifies several broad types used extensively in Coronation Street: Grandmother figures; marriageable characters (mature, sexy, women; spinsterly types; young women; mature, sexy, men; fearful, withdrawn men; conventional young men); married couples; rogues (including 'ne'er-do-wells' and confidence tricksters). Buckingham refers also refers to the use of the stereotypes of 'the gossip', 'the bastard' and 'the tart'. Anthony Easthope adds 'the good girl', and Peter Buckman cites 'the decent husband', 'the good woman', 'the villain' and 'the bitch' (in Geraghty 1991, p. 132). Geraghty herself adds 'the career woman' (ibid., p. 135ff).

Coronation Street
Coronation Street is a Granada production which is broadcast nationally in the UK on ITV. First shown in 1960, it is the longest-running British TV soap opera. It is watched by about one-third of the British population, by rather more women than men, by older people, and especially by people from lower socio-economic groups (Livingstone 1990, p. 55). It offers a nostalgic perspective on northern industrial working-class life as group-centred, matriarchal, commonsensical and blunt but also warm-hearted.
It includes strong and positive middle-aged females who are the first to spring to mind when viewers are asked to recall the characters. It deals with personal events. Work away from the home is seldom shown. Political and social explanations for events are largely supplanted by personal explanations based on the innate psychological factors of individuals or (occasionally) on luck (Jordan, in Dyer 1981). People meet in shops and the pub to comment on events. Life seems to revolve around finding a partner. The introduction of outsiders to the community is usually presented as a threat.
It departs from realism in its use of caricature, stereotyping, bursts of stylised repartee and occasional use of melodrama, some of these features sometimes being employed almost self-mockingly. It has been criticized for the minimal role of non-whites. There is little of the inner searching of 'psychological realism'. Viewing ratings dropped when an attempt was made to introduce more contemporary themes, and there was then a move towards a lighter, more humorous style. One producer said in 1985: 'We are in the business of entertaining, not offending' (in Goodwin & Whannel 1990, p. 122). Rival soaps have led to some attempts to update the style. However, it has been criticized as having grown old with its audience.
The camerawork and editing is very conventional. Cutting is largely motivated by dialogue. Camerawork consists primarily of group shots, 2-shots or 3-shots (in medium to medium close-up), shot-reverse shot, occasional panning, and close-ups of single characters for emphasis.

Brookside
Brookside, set in a modern Liverpool housing estate, first appeared in 1982, and it became Channel 4's highest-rated programme with around 6 million viewers (it also appears on S4C in Wales). Producer Phil Redmond declared that it would 'tell the truth and show society as it really is', dealing with what are seen as topical issues and problems such as unemployment (in Goodwin & Whannel 1990, p. 123). 'The Close' uses part of a real housing estate rather than a constructed studio set.
It features a range of characters from different social classes, and some of the actors are similar to the characters they play. It has a number of young characters (including some still at school) so not surprisingly it appeals very much to younger viewers. It also offers a wider range of male characeters than the traditional British soaps. Geraghty suggests that the programme has also given more prominence to 'male preoccupations': 'Brookside has developed story lines which depend more on action and resolution rather than the more soap-oriented narrative strategies of commentary and repetition' (Geraghty 1991, p. 169). It has sometimes drawn on the genre of the crime series.
The use of real houses tends to restrict it to a single-camera approach. There are no real meeting places, which makes it difficult to weave several stories together. And it has sometimes been criticized for being too didactic.

Eastenders
Eastenders, a BBC production, was first broadcast in 1985. It is watched by a little under a third of the British population, by more women than men, and more by those in lower socio-economic groups (Livingstone 1990, p. 55). The BBC is aware of its 'responsibility' as a public service (unlike commercial British television companies) to be of benefit to the public, and to produce 'serious' programmes of 'quality'. The characters tend to be mainly working class. In addition to women, young characters and men are given strong roles, so that the potential audience is wide. It has become particularly popular with teenagers. Buckingham notes that 'much of their fascination - and particularly that of the younger children - arose from its inclusion of aspects of adult life from which they were normally "protected"' (1987, p. 200).
Set in London's East End, it is in the social realist tradition. The programme makers emphasized that it was to be about 'everyday life' in the inner city 'today' (in Goodwin & Whannel 1990, p. 124). They regard it as a 'slice of life'. Producer Julia Smith disingenuously declared that 'we don't make life, we reflect it' (Geraghty 1991, p. 32). She has also reported: 'We decided to go for a realistic, fairly outspoken type of drama which could encompass stories about homosexuals, rape, unemployment, racial prejudice, etc. in a believable context. Above all, we wanted realism. Unemployment, exams, racism, birth, death, dogs, babies, unmarried mums - we didn't want to fudge any issue except politics and swearing' (ibid., p. 16).
Eastenders has also featured single-parent families, teenage pregnancy, prostitution, arranged marriages, attempted suicide, drug problems, alcoholism, generational conflicts, a protection racket, a cot death, extra-marital affairs and marital bust-ups, sexism, urban deprivation, mental breakdown, disappearances, muggings, a fatal road accident and a suspected murder: it has sometimes been criticized for being bleak! Perhaps in an attempt to attract more male viewers once can sometimes notice a tendency to shift a little towards the genre of the crime series. Nevertheless, much of the action remains deliberately mundane.
Although it was part of the intention to handle 'controversial social issues' the programme makers insist that Eastenders is not 'issues-based' (i.e. storylines are not developed simply to illustrate predetermined issues). They see themselves as pursuing 'documentary realism' and their dramatic use of conflict leads to issues arising 'naturally' (Buckingham 1987, pp. 16; 30; 83). They accept that the programme has an informational or educational function for viewers, offering a discussion of topics of concern to them, but they are more concerned with raising questions than with offering answers. Entertainment is seen as the main purpose. The programme makers probably seek to avoid putting viewers off by seeming to be patronising. However, critics have occasionally noted episodes involving a very didactic style.
The programme does not confine itself to the naturalistic mode, but sometimes shifts towards either melodrama or sitcom. Buckingham observes that the camerawork and editing is in the naturalist tradition, supporting an interpretation of the programme as a 'window on the world': the use of the camera is unobtrusive and largely static, with only rare use of close-ups and tracking; the editing seeks to be 'invisible'; the background sound has a 'density of naturalistic detail'; lighting is usually flat, with no harsh shadows (ibid., p. 74). However, he also notes that it tends to have more simultaneous storylines, more scenes, more meeting-places, more characters per episode, and a faster pace than either Coronation Street or Brookside (ibid., p. 54).

Dallas and Dynasty
Dallas, a high-budget American weekly prime-time soap first screened in 1976, has been broadcast in over 90 countries. One fifth of the British population watched it; viewers included more women than men (Livingstone 1990, p. 55). Some theorists distinguish the American prime-time soaps Dallas and Dynasty from British social realist soaps by referring to these US soaps as 'melodramatic serials'. They certainly featured the villains, villainesses and emotional excess of melodrama and sometimes drifted into total fantasy. Elements of the Western were also employed.
These soaps focused, of course, on the rich: 'poverty is eliminated by the simple tactic of ignoring it' (Geraghty 1991, p. 121). Glamour was a key feature: locations were often exotic and the costumes of the main actresses were often extravagant; viewers were invited into a world of abundance. Most of the characters were physically very attractive, and almost all were white. Dallas also made more use of cliffhangers than British soaps: usually a 'psychological cliffhanger', Ang notes (1985, p. 53). Dallas featured the rivalry between the Ewing family and the Barnes family, but business life was far more central than in British soaps. The story also featured murder, marital crisis, adultery, alcoholism, illness, miscarriage, rape, air and car accidents, kidnapping, corruption, illegitimate children, secret pasts, chance meetings and so on.
Some critics say that 'too much happens' in US soaps by comparison with British ones: the pace tends to be faster. An episode typically featured 20-30 short scenes, most of which consisted of conversation. Camerawork and editing remained conventional, to avoid distancing the viewer. Facial expressions are sometimes shown in close-up and held for a few seconds before the next scene. Regarding soaps in general, Tania Modleski (1982, pp. 99-100) notes that close-ups (seen by Robert Allen as a key feature of prime-time soaps) provide training in the 'feminine' skills of 'reading people' - in understanding the difference between what is said and what is meant - as well as an invitation to become involved with the characters depicted.

Neighbours
This Australian soap was aimed at young people, and attracted many young viewers in the UK. It has been criticized for its bland stereotyping. It tends to feature primarily physically attractive people and there is also a notable absence of people of colour. Maire Messenger Davies suggests that 'nothing goes wrong in Neighbours for very long and that's why children like it' (in Hart 1991, p. 136).

Women as viewers
Soaps in general have a predominantly female audience, although prime-time soaps such as Dallas and the most recent British soaps are deliberately aimed at a wider audience. According to Ang, and hardly surprisingly, in Dallas the main interest for men was in business relations and problem and the power and wealth shown, whereas for women were more often interested in the family issues and love affairs. In the case of Dallas it is clear that the programme meant something different for female viewers compared with male viewers.
In 'realist' soaps female characters are portrayed as more central than in action drama, as ordinary people coping with everyday problems. Certainly soaps tend to appeal to those who value the personal and domestic world. The audience for such soaps does include men, but some theorists argue that the gender identity of the viewer is 'inscribed' in programmes, and that typically with soaps the inscribed viewer has a traditional female gender identity. And 'the competences necessary for reading soap opera are most likely to have been acquired by those persons culturally constructed through discourses of femininity' (Morley 1992, p. 129).
As housewives and mothers, women need to be able to do several things at once, to switch from one task to another, to deal with other people's problems, to be interrupted. Redundancy and repetition make interrupted viewing possible; it has even been suggested that soaps are made to be heard rather than seen. Modleski argues that watching soap operas habituates women to distraction and fragmentation.
Dorothy Hobson interviewed women office workers in Birmingham and found that their free-time conversation was often based on their soap opera viewing. Some had begun watching simply because they had discovered how central it seemed to be in lunchtime discussions. It involved anticipating what might happen next, discussing the significance of recent events and relating them to their own experiences. Hobson argues that women typically use soaps as a way of talking indirectly about their own attitudes and behaviour (in Seiter et al. 1989: pp. 150-67). Geraghty (1991, p. 123) also notes that there is some evidence that families use soaps as a way of raising and discussing awkward situations.
Most viewers seem to oscillate between involvement and distance in the ways in which they engage with soaps.

Television and Gender Roles

Television and Gender Roles


Gender and TV Production
Television still perpetuates traditional gender stereotypes because it reflects dominant social values. In reflecting them TV also reinforces them, presenting them as 'natural'. As one might expect in a society still dominated by men, men dominate TV production and, influenced by these stereotypes, unconsciously reproduce a traditional 'masculine' perspective, perpetuating dominant gender stereotypes. Many narratives on TV are still implicitly designed to be interpreted from a masculine perspective. Viewers are frequently invited to identify with male characters and to objectify females. This has been called 'the male gaze'. This mode of viewing is called 'unmarked': it is an invisible and largely unquestioned bias - the masculine perspective is the 'norm'. IDEOLOGY IS MOST POWERFUL WHEN IT IS UNSEEN – HEGEMONIC

Girls learn from most TV that it is a man's world, and learn to displace their own perspective. In recent years there has at least been a notable increase in the number of women news presenters. Formerly, TV directors (largely male, of course) had argued that women were less likely to be taken seriously by viewers. However, one could perhaps argue that physical attractiveness may play more part in their selection than for their male counterparts.
There is in fact some evidence that girls (aged 8-12) may tend to find a male newsreader more believable than a woman newsreader, whereas the newsreader's sex does not seem to influence boys' ideas of their believability. Girls may grow used to being presented with the male on TV in general as more powerful and knowledgeable (see Durkin: 94).

Numbers of males and females on TV

Whatever its limitations as a TV research method, content analysis does at least provide us with basic data about the prevalence of gender images on TV. The number of women shown on TV is far smaller than the number of men shown. Men outnumber women in general TV drama by 3 or 4 to 1. 70-85% of those on children's TV are male, and in children's cartoons, males outnumber females by 10 to 1. Even in soap operas women can be outnumbered 7:3. There are also more men than women in starring roles; the exceptions are notable only as exceptions. In contrast to this dominance of the screen by men, we all know that in the everyday world, women in fact slightly outnumber men. In this sense, TV does not reflect observable demographic realities, although it may well reflect the current distribution of power, and the values of those who hold it.

Gender vs Sex

Most social scientists distinguish gender from sex. Gender roles are not biologically determined, but vary acording to culture and epoch, and even for individuals during the course of their lives. Gender roles are consequently described by social scientists as socially constructed. Most of the behaviour associated with gender is learned rather than innate. People learn what sorts of behaviour and personality are regarded in their cultural context as appropriate for males or females.
Even within a culture masculinity and femininity may be defined differently by various groups, in particular according to ethnicity, age, social class and sexuality. In this sense there is no single masculinity or femininity, but rather multiple masculinities and femininities. Not all men are 'leaderlike', 'aggressive', 'assertive', 'independent', 'risk-taking' and so on; and not all women are 'affectionate', 'gentle', 'sympathetic', 'dependent', 'emotional', 'nurturing' etc. Such qualities are found in varying degrees in most people. REMEMBER THEN THAT WOMEN ARE NOT AN HOMOGENEOUS GROUP AND THAT SOCIAL STRATIFICATION IMPACTS UPON YOUR LIFE . IE. BLACK WUPPER CLASS WOMEN WILL HAVE A DIFFENT EXPERIENCE THAN WHITE WORKING CLASS WOMEN.
But all men and all women are aware of the cultural prevalence of traditional gender stereotypes, and television contributes to this awareness. Sex roles involve cultural expectations, such as that men will seek achievement and dominance, and that women will be compliant and supportive. The relationship of individuals to these expectations often involves tensions.

Occupations by gender
The majority of women on TV are restricted to a few roles. Male roles are far more extensive and more exciting. Women are often shown on TV in 'traditional' roles such as housewives, mothers, secretaries and nurses; men are shown as husbands and fathers, but also as athletes, celebrities and tycoons. Marital status on is more often revealed for women on TV than for men. Men on TV are more often portrayed in employment, tend to have a higher status and are less likely to be shown in the home. Where women are shown as successful outside the domestic sphere they are frequently portrayed as unhappy in their personal lives. Once again, such a distribution of occupational roles lags well behind current realities in the workplace (however limited these may still be). THIS IS WHAT GAYE TUCHMAN REFERS TO AS SYMBOLIC ANNIHILATION

Stereotypical representations of gender roles
Though not as strongly as in earlier years, the portrayal of both men and women on TV is largely traditional and stereotypical. This serves to promote a polarization of gender roles. [With femininity are associated traits such as emotionality, prudence, co-operation, a communal sense, and compliance. Masculinity tends to be associated with such traits as rationality, efficiency, competition, individualism and ruthlessness.]
Meehan has shown how on TV, 'good' women are presented as submissive, sensitive and domesticated; 'bad' women are rebellious, independent and selfish. The 'dream-girl' stereotype is gentle, demure, sensitive, submissive, non-competitive, sweet- natured and dependent. The male hero tends to be physically strong, aggressive, assertive, takes the initiative, is independent, competitive and ambitious. TV and film heroes represent goodness, power, control, confidence, competence and success. They are geared, in other words, to succeed in a competitive economic system. There is no shortage of aggressive male role-models in Westerns, war films and so on. Many boys try to emulate such characteristics through action and aggression. WE CAN SEE HOW THIS HAS UNFOLDED IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF COMPUTER GAMES
There are few women in the heroic role played by Sigourney Weaver in Aliens. Men tend to be shown as more dominant, more violent and more powerful than women. Men on TV are more likely to disparage women than vice versa. They drive, drink and smoke more, do athletic things, and make more plans. They are found more in the world of things than in relationships. Women on TV tend to be younger than the men, typically under 30. WE HAVE EXAMPLES OF SEXIST AGISM IN THE MEDIA

So TV images largely reflect traditional patriarchal notions of gender. Stereotypical masculinity, for instance, is portrayed as natural, normal and universal, but it is fact a particular construction. It is largely a white, middle-class heterosexual masculinity. This is a masculinity within which any suggestion of feminine qualities or homosexuality is denied, and outside which women are subordinated. The notion of 'natural' sex differences help to preserve the inequalities on which our economic system continues to be based. ALTHOUGH WE REFER TO THE OPPSITE SEX, MEN AND WOMEN ARE OF COURSE NOT OPPSITES AND IN FACT ARE CHARACTERISED BY FAR MORE SIMILARITIES THAN DIFFERENCES

General advertisements
In television advertisements, gender stereotyping tends to be at its strongest because the target audiences are frequently either male or female. There has been some lessening of this in recent years but the general pattern remains. In adverts, men tend to be portrayed as more autonomous. They are shown in more occupations than women; women are shown mainly as housewives and mothers. Men are more likely to be shown advertising cars or business products; women are mostly advertising domestic products. Men are more likely to be shown outdoors or in business settings; women in domestic settings. Men are more often portrayed as authorities. As far as ads go, with age men seem to gain authority, whilst women seem to disappear.
Voice-overs represent the programme-maker's interpretations of what is seen: these are the voices of 'authority'. They are overwhelmingly male (figures of up to 94% have been reported). There have been more female voice-overs in recent years but mainly for food, household products and feminine care products. Male voice-overs tend to be associated with a far wider range of products.

Adverts for children
Most modern TV ads feature both girls and boys, but boys tend to be the dominant ones. Ads aimed at boys portray far more activity and aggressive behaviour than those for girls, and tend to be far louder. Boys are typically shown as active, aggressive, rational and discontented. Boys ads contain active toys, varied scenes, rapid camera cuts and loud, dramatic music and sounds. Girls ads tend to have frequent fades, dissolves, and gentle background music (Welch et al.)

Children's programmes
Up to 85% of the characters in children's TV are male, even in cartoons, and with animal characters - the sexual distribution of which is roughly as for Homo sapiens. Similarly, the occupational range for female characters on children's TV far more limited than for males. BOB THE BUILDER IS A CLASSIC EXAMPLE

Children on TV
In general on TV, boys tend to be shown as active, aggressive, rational and discontented. They tend to engage in traditional male activities such as sports, travel and causing trouble. Even now, girls are often shown talking on the phone, reading and helping with the housework. This pattern is even found in educational programmes for children.  CONSIDER THE NARNIA FILMS HERE

Gender and genre
Many commentators argue that viewing pleasures may be different for men and women. This is partly a question of programme genres, and partly of style of engagement with TV. Some theorists distinguish between styles of programmes which are broadly 'masculine' or 'feminine'. Those seen as typically masculine include action/adventure programmes, Westerns and factual programmes; those seen as more 'feminine' include soaps, sitcoms, romantic fiction and melodrama. Action-adventures define men in relation to power, authority, aggression and technology. Soap operas define women in relation to a concern with the family. It is largely in sitcoms and soaps that men may sometimes be seen as caring, loving and expressive rather than dominating and authoritative. USES AND GRATIFICATIONS MODEL MIGHT HELP EXPLAIN THE REASONS MEN AND WOMEN WATCH TV AND CONSUME OTHER MEDIA

Soaps
Soaps in general have a predominantly female audience, although prime-time soaps such as Dallas are deliberately aimed at a wider audience, and in fact at least 30% of the audience for this soap was male. According to Ang, and hardly surprisingly, in Dallas the main interest for men was in business relations and problem and the power and wealth shown, whereas women were more often interested in the family issues and love affairs. In the case of Dallas it is clear that the programme meant something different for female viewers compared with male viewers.
The audience for soaps does include men (and probably more men than are prepared to admit it), but some theorists argue that the gender of the viewer is 'inscribed' in the programme so that soaps address women in particular. Soaps appeal to those who value the personal and domestic world. Dorothy Hobson argues that women typically use soaps as a way of talking indirectly about their own attitudes and behaviour. There is no doubt that viewing and talking with family and friends about soap operas is experienced by many women as a pleasurable experience, and the dismissal of the worth of the genre by many commentators, including some feminists critical of gender stereotyping, is open to the charge of cultural élitism.

The openness of soaps
Some feminist theorists have argued that soap operas spring from a feminine aesthetic, in contrast to most prime-time TV. Soaps are unlike traditional drama which has a beginning, a middle and an end: soaps have no beginning or end, no structural closure. They do not build up towards an ending or closure of meaning. Viewers can join a soap at any point: there are built-in devices to recap on aspects of the plot. There is no single narrative line. In this sense the plots of soaps are not linear. Narrative lines are interwoven over time. The structure of soaps is complex and there is no final word on any issue. A soap involves multiple perspectives and no consensus. Ambivalence and contradiction is characteristic of the genre. This leaves soaps particularly open to individual interpretations.
Modleski argues that pleasure in masculine narrative forms focuses on closure, whilst soaps delay resolution and make anticipation an end in itself. She also argues that masculine narratives 'inscribe' in the text an implied male reader who becomes increasingly omnipotent whilst the soap has 'the ideal mother' as inscribed viewer - a sympathetic listener to all sides. In 'realist' soaps female characters are portrayed as more central than in action drama, as ordinary people coping with everyday problems. Christine Geraghty argues that viewers see events in realist soaps through the eyes of such women (in Dyer et al., 1981). There is no single hero in soaps and no privileged moral perspective.
Easthope argues that the masculine ego favours forms which are self-contained, and which have a sense of closure. 'Masculine' narrative favours action over dialogue and avoids indeterminacy to arrive at closure/resolution. It is linear and goal-oriented. Dialogue in masculine narratives is driven by plot which it explains, clarifies and simplifies. John Fiske has argued that 'masculine' programmes are less open to multiple interpretations than 'feminine' programmes, which tend to be more open and ambiguous. Certainly women frequently report the importance to them of talking to others about the situations and characters in the soaps they watch. The characters in this sense become part of the viewers' everyday lives.
In soaps dialogue blurs and delays. Soaps make consequences more important than actions and involve many complications. Not much seems to 'happen' in many soaps because there is no rapid action. In soaps such as Coronation Street and Brookside what matters is the effect of events on the characters, This is revealed through characters talking to each other. Viewers tend to feel involved in interpreting events from the perspective of characters similar to themselves or to those they know.
Women who are housewives and mothers need to be able to do several things at once, to switch from one task to another, to deal with other people's problems, to be interrupted. Modleski argues that watching soap operas habituates women to interruption and fragmentation. As Livingstone puts it: 'through narrative redundancy and repetition they make it easy, through dramatic tension and delayed gratification they make it pleasurable'.
However, it is easy to oversimplify gender differences in interpreting TV. Social class, ethnicity, age and education are all complicating factors, and there are considerable differences within gender.
TO IMPRESS THE EXAMINER YOU MIGHT BE ABLE TO EMPLOY THE ENCODER DECODER MODELTO ARGUE THAT MEN AND WOMEN TAKE DIFFERENT MEANING S FROM SOAPS. THE USES AND GRATIFICATION MODEL MIGHT EXPLAIN THE DIFFERENT PLEASURES.

'Masculine' genres
Sport on television is dominated by men and tends to inculcate masculine values. Sports programmes define men in relation to competition, strength and discipline. REFER TO RECENT ANDY GRAY SACKING FROM SKY SPORTS
Most war films promote violence as 'natural' and heroic for males. Women in these films are typically mothers, chattel or whores. The soldiers are men of few words, heroic deeds and stoic endurance. As John Wayne put it, 'Never apologize, mister - it's a sign of weakness'. Lethal tasks are performed by soldiers in these films with no show of emotion.
Easthope argues that detective stories 'give the masculine ego the pleasure of mastery, certainty, seeing it all clearly laid out in the end'. Detective stories involve following clues and unravelling plots to re-establish a sense of order.

The male gaze
I have referred already to the overwhelming use of males for voice-overs. Visuals are similarly given an invisible masculine frame...
Erving Goffman (1979) found that in media advertisements 'men tend to be located higher than women' and 'women are pictured on floors and beds more than men'. He noted that 'lowering oneself physically in some form or other of prostration' is 'a classic stereotype of deference'. It effectively presents women as inferior to men.
On TV, men tend to be shown in closeface shots whereas women tend to be seen in full body shots. This has been called 'face-ism'. The face is generally seen as representing intellect and the body as emotion in western cultural mythologies.

Buddy narratives
The so-called 'buddy movies' portray men paired as co-heroes and tend to be action-oriented. In them, men are seen as acting together rather than just being together as women tend to be. Westerns tend to be the clearest example of images of male bonding on TV, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid being a classic celebration of the 'buddy' relationship. Women in the film are treated as marginal and as objects of exchange between the two buddies (see Easthope). Other example of the buddy theme are The Man from U.N.C.L.E., Starsky & Hutch, M*A*S*H, Star Trek and Miami Vice. Such narratives shown bonding through activity rather than intimacy - though sometimes physical (rather than emotional) intimacy is portrayed (as in Starsky & Hutch). And bond is goal-oriented rather than relationship-oriented.
Male friendships on TV are rarely intimate. Any intimate relationship between men is more likely to be found in sitcoms (which tend to be aimed largely at women and children). Men in TV drama who express their feelings do so largely to women.

Gays on TV
Intimacy between men inspires homophobic reactions. Typically gays are symbols of what masulinity should not involve. Without homosexuality, heterosexuality has no meaning. Although gays are largely invisible on TV there has been an slightly increasing tendency to feature token gay stereotypes on TV, though they are rarely shown enjoying happy lives (in Dynasty, one recalls Steven's lovers getting killed). Stories about gays tend to reinforce conventional values. Even when gay men are portrayed the central focus tends to be on the reaction of others to this as a 'problem'. This is particularly disturbing if, as some suggest, TV images may be more important to gays in identity- formation and socialization than to heterosexuals - who have frequent access to positive images.

Modes of use
David Morley's important study Family Television offers a host of insights into the differences between mothers and fathers in terms of the way in which they use television, at least amongst white lower-middle- and working- class families. Morley emphasizes that he does not see these differences in modes of use as related to biological sex differences, but to social roles in the home and the distribution of power. For men the home still tends to be primarily a place of leisure; for women (even those who work outside it) the home is still mainly a place of work. The way men tend to use TV is not so much an inherently 'masculine' mode but what Charlotte Brunsdon calls 'a mode of power'.

Degree of attention
Morley reports that many men prefer to watch TV with full concentration, without interruption, and in silence, and that many women watch with less attention. Some women prefer to watch and chat at the same time, seeing television viewing as a social activity. Women also refer more often than men to chatting about TV programmes with friends and workmates. One women (cited by Hobson, in Seiter et al.) declared 'I only watch Coronation Street so I can talk about it.'
Fathers who become engrossed in TV programmes (most clearly in news programmes, apparently) are of course at the time less responsive to other members of the family. Some commentators have argued that watching in this way is a deliberate way for men to shut out the rest of the family. It is very uncommon for mothers to neglect the family in this way: they tend to maintain a monitoring role. Some may on occasion even watch primarily in order to make social contact with another viewer. This is a clear reflection of prevailing social roles in the home. Most mothers would feel too guilty to watch television as wholeheartedly as many men like to do, and the prevailing pattern of responsibilities in the home does not permit women to watch in the way that men prefer. As Ang puts it (in Seiter et al.): 'Men... can watch television in a concentrated manner because they control the conditions to do so.'

Choice of programmes
Fathers are the ones referred to most often as controlling the selection of TV programmes on the main family TV set, though fathers often didn't see it this way (Lull). In Morley's sample, men were far more likely to plan a evening's viewing in advance than women were. For many men the remote control device is effectively symbolic of their power of choice over programmes. Some women complain that their husbands often switch programmes without regard for whether their wives had been watching. Mothers only rarely take such unilateral action. This is a reflection of male power in the home. As one girl put it, 'Dad keeps both of the automatic controls - one on each side of his chair.'

Programme Types
Morley's study showed a strong male preference for 'factual' programmes such as news, current affairs and documentaries, and a female preference for fictional programmes, including romantic fiction in particular. Morley also felt that this pattern was reinforced for men by a sense of guilt that watching TV is 'second best' to other more physically active leisure pursuits. When men watch fictional programmes, they also seem to prefer what they feel are more 'realistic' programmes (eg. 'realistic' sitcoms). Radway's research on women's reading has shown that many of the women she interviewed read romantic fiction as an escape from the continual demands of their work within and outside the home. Morley reported that the women he interviewed felt guilty about their enjoyment of romance or soaps on TV.
When women watch news programmes, they tend to prefer local rather than national news. Morley argues that this also reflects women's sense of domestic responsibility, for instance in keeping an eye on local crime in case it has implications for the family.
Regarding tastes in comedy, women in Morley's sample tended to reject 'zany' comedy (in particular, at the time, The Young Ones), whilst the men and teenagers tended to enjoy such comedies. Here Morley suggests that domestic disorder may not seem funny if domestic orderliness is your prime concern.
However, any tendencies for men and women to use TV in different ways can be easily oversimplified. Many modes of interaction with TV are shared by men and women, and other factors apart from gender may sometimes be more important. It results from the dominant model of gender relations in western society.

Influence of TV gender images
There is a general consensus that the mass media act as important agents of socialization, together with the family and peers, contributing to the shaping of gender roles. I stressed in my previous lecture the emphasis given by social learning theorists such as Bandura to the modelling of behaviour on observed examples. Certainly we learn to be male or female - it doesn't come 'naturally' and the mass media contribute to making such roles seem 'natural'. And there is no doubt that TV presents powerful, attention-grabbing images of gender. It has been noted that many boys spend more time with male role-models on TV than with their own fathers.
But television alone is not responsible for shaping people's gender roles. There are plenty of examples of gender-typed behaviour around us in the social world. A special contribution of TV may be to present examples of models found in a broader world than that which is more directly experienced in the home and the locality. Wherever they get their ideas from, by the age of about 6, (even in rhetorically anti-sexist families) it seems that most children develop clearcut stereotypes about what the sexes can or cannot do. And given that TV is not short of sexist images, and that children watch a lot of TV, it's tempting to assign the blame to television.
Early researchers (such as Sue Sharpe) tended to see the media as inevitably socializing children into traditional stereotypical roles, because of the prevalence of such images on TV and the importance ascribed to them by children. However, such accounts tend to overestimate the power of the media and underestimate the variety of ways in which people - even children - handle their experiences of them. TV images of boys, girls, men and women are more varied and less clearcut than such arguments suggest. Television offers contradictory images which can be interpreted in many ways, and viewers are far more active interpreters than the passive recipients suggested by such accounts.
Kevin Durkin stresses developmental factors. In the preschool years (up to around 4), children learn to use gender as a way of discriminating between people. It is unlikely that TV is a major influence at this stage, since the child is heavily engaged in social interaction with family and friends, and since much of TV is too complex to be fully understood in the early years.
During the early school years (around 4-7), the child's sense of gender becomes well established, though somewhat rigidly stereotyped. During this phase, children seem pay more attention to same-sex figures than to other-sex figures on the screen. This probably serves both to confirm and extend their assumptions about gender. But again, TV is far from the only source of data on gender for the child: schoolteachers now join friends and family as sources, and the peer group becomes significantly more important.
During middle childhood (around 7-12), children refine their psychological understanding of gender and develop sex-typed preferences for differing types of TV programmes. Even at this stage they do not necessarily accept as real or desirable what they watch. Indeed, there is some evidence that at this stage heavy viewers may show some scepticism about gender steroetypes.
The potential influence of TV may be greatest during adolescence (around 12-18), since at this stage gender plays such a key part in social life. At this stage dominant gender images on TV may tend to reinforce traditional expectations amongst adolescents, thus inducing role conflicts. Some commentators speculate that the gap between adolescent self-concepts and glamorous media images may sometimes induce personal insecurity.
In short, although there are huge gaps in our knowledge of developmental factors, the developmental perspective emphasizes the problem of talking about the influence of TV on 'the child' in general. And the critical importance of the family should not be neglected, either. I have already outlined features of the politics of TV use. It would be unlikely for children not to be influenced by the differing ways in which their parents use TV. In families in which the gender roles are largely traditional, TV may tend to serve to reinforce such gender roles. In this way television certainly plays a role in the construction of gender roles.
More broadly, we need to remember that all viewers have several options regarding gender images: to accept them; to disregard them; to interpret them in their own way; and to reject them. As John Fiske puts it (in Seiter et al.), 'Television is not quite a do-it-yourself meaning kit but neither is it a box of ready-made meanings'. Children's scatological rewriting of jingles from TV ads is an amusing example of the way children reinterpret TV from their own perspective.
TV offers a wide range of potential role-models, both positive and negative. Many people find these models of some use to them. It is not inevitable that viewers accept TV gender images without question, but many popular commentators tend to assume that they are more discriminating than ordinary mortals. Not all women, children - or even men - are passive victims of patriarchal stereotyping.
Though there is little doubt that TV presents largely traditional gender images there is mixed evidence about the impact of such images on gender attitudes and behaviour. It is difficult to isolate the role of TV, since people are influenced by their whole environment, although there is fairly widespread agreement that over time TV seems likely to influence people's ideas about gender roles.
There is some research evidence suggesting that heavy TV viewing may contribute to gender role development and/or reinforcement amongst children and adolescents, and some associating sexism or stereotyping of gender roles with heavy TV viewers (Gerbner). Durkin finds the evidence so far inadequate. However, there is evidence that counterstereotypical portrayals do seem able to influence children's perceptions of their options, but such portrayals are generally rare.
In short, studies of the influence of TV gender images on children are not very conclusive, partly because they have not always been well designed. Many studies have shown a modest association between viewing patterns and gender stereotypes. There is not much evidence yet for any strong impact of TV. Children are not passive recipients of TV images. Their existing attitudes to gender role play an important part in interpreting images of gender on TV.
Thus, once again, the available evidence does not offer a simple picture of the role of TV in the development of gender roles. As always in social science, the picture is subtle, complex, and rich in research opportunities.