Images of beauty: Constructions of black women in music videos

1999 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guerda Nicolas
Author(s):  
Travis L. Dixon ◽  
Kristopher R. Weeks ◽  
Marisa A. Smith

Racial stereotypes flood today’s mass media. Researchers investigate these stereotypes’ prevalence, from news to entertainment. Black and Latino stereotypes draw particular concern, especially because they misrepresent these racial groups. From both psychological and sociological perspectives, these misrepresentations can influence how people view their racial group as well as other groups. Furthermore, a racial group’s lack of representation can also reduce the group’s visibility to the general public. Such is the case for Native Americans and Asian Americans. Given mass media’s widespread distribution of black and Latino stereotypes, most research on mediated racial portrayals focuses on these two groups. For instance, while black actors and actresses appear often in prime-time televisions shows, black women appear more often in situational comedies than any other genre. Also, when compared to white actors and actresses, television casts blacks in villainous or despicable roles at a higher rate. In advertising, black women often display Eurocentric features, like straight hair. On the other hand, black men are cast as unemployed, athletic, or entertainers. In sports entertainment, journalists emphasize white athletes’ intelligence and black athletes’ athleticism. In music videos, black men appear threatening and sport dark skin tones. These music videos also sexualize black women and tend to emphasize those with light skin tones. News media overrepresent black criminality and exaggerate the notion that blacks belong to the undeserving poor class. Video games tend to portray black characters as either violent outlaws or athletic. While mass media misrepresent the black population, it tends to both misrepresent and underrepresent the Latino population. When represented in entertainment media, Latinos assume hypersexualized roles and low-occupation jobs. Both news and entertainment media overrepresent Latino criminality. News outlets also overly associate Latino immigration with crime and relate Latino immigration to economic threat. Video games rarely portray Latino characters. Creators may create stereotypic content or fail to fairly represent racial and ethnic groups for a few reasons. First, the ethnic blame discourse in the United States may influence creators’ conscious and unconscious decision-making processes. This discourse contends that the ethnic and racial minorities are responsible for their own problems. Second, since stereotypes appeal to and are easily processed by large general audiences, the misrepresentation of racial and ethnic groups facilitates revenue generation. This article largely discusses media representations of blacks and Latinos and explains the implications of such portrayals.


1998 ◽  
Vol 15 (3/4) ◽  
pp. 65
Author(s):  
Jacqueline Warwick ◽  
Robin Roberts
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
María-Carmen Sánchez-Vizcaíno

<p align="left"><strong>Resumen</strong></p><p>Nuestro imaginario colectivo continúa mostrando un sesgo inconsciente determinado con respecto a la representación de la mujer en la sociedad. En parte, debido al contenido audiovisual percibido de forma recurrente, como es el caso de los videoclips. Este artículo analiza la proyección de la mujer en videoclips en español emitidos en 2019 en plataformas digitales de difusión musical. Se han extraído los 47 de mayor frecuencia y mediante el programa de análisis cualitativo Atlas.ti. se han estudiado sus recursos narrativos y multimodales. Los resultados evidencian que todavía abundan los videoclips donde se difunden temáticas estereotipadas sobre el género femenino como<strong> </strong>la reducción de la figura de la mujer, su inferioridad con respecto al hombre o el elogio a la belleza y a la juventud.</p><p align="left"><strong>Abstract</strong></p><p>Our collective imagination still includes a particular unconscious bias with regard to the representation of women in society, in part due to audio-visual content perceived on a recurring basis, such as music videos. This article analyses the representation of women in music videos in Spanish, disseminated via global music-streaming services in 2019. The 47 most frequent have been extracted and through the qualitative analysis program Atlas.ti their narrative and multimodal resources have been studied. The results show that most music videos still display a stereotyped portrayal of women, such as woman's objectification and her relationship to man, or praise of beauty and youth.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 1538-1563
Author(s):  
Juan Ardiles Nafie

The appearance of women in music videos is a site that shows various ideologies which influence the thinking of a society about the construction of women, including the construction of the profession of women. The appearance of women is inseparable from values and is not solely in the interests of women but there are certain interests. This study wants to see whether the representation of the women's profession in the local music video shows strength in women or leads to a new repression for local women in East Nusa Tenggara. The aims of this study are to provide an overview of the meaning of the women's profession through local music videos of East Nusa Tenggara and to provide a description of the hybridity discourse in the depiction of the women's profession through the NTT Local music video. The type of this research is descriptive qualitative research uses the approach of feminism, the women's profession, public space and cultural hybridization theory to see how the meaning of the women's profession in local music videos in East Nusa Tenggara. This study uses the analysis of semiotics of Carol Vernalis. The data in this study were analyzed in 3 stages, namely: (1) structural analysis created in the music video, (2) reading the video chronology and analysis of two specific parts, and (3) understanding the women's profession in terms of cultural hybridity. The results of this study indicate that women who are teachers are not professionally interpreted as attached to the teaching profession but emphasize the symbols of modern women through space and fashion. Hybridity between the appearance of modern women but still bound by local patriarchal culture. Women who are midwives are interpreted by the domestication of women. Women are shown with an ideal picture of women. The meaning of the women's profession experienced repression, where the women's profession featured in this local music videos is the result of a tug-of-war on various discourses in which the appearance is more concerned with modernity that leads to industrial interests. Hybridity is not only related to the fusion of culture but the consequences of domination that arise when there is fusion of culture. In the end, this music videos do not fully show the female profession but the interests of modernity, global, patriarchy are prioritized.


Ob Gyn News ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 43 (3) ◽  
pp. 21
Author(s):  
Miriam E. Tucker
Keyword(s):  

2007 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 54
Author(s):  
PATRICE WENDLING
Keyword(s):  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document