Representation of Race, Sexuality, Gender and Class in Media:
“Modern Family Series Analysis”
Through history and till our contemporary days, we still have many different representations of race, class, sexuality and gender. An individual’s skin shade, their ethnic and folk practices, religion, language, bodily forms and even their personalities are enough to give an image or views to what group or groups a person belongs to. These representations are often erected and formed by different people in different societies. They mostly result in the creation of deceitful and made-up stereotypes, which are mostly utterly humiliating, and could become an enormous strain, every day, to those individuals that are from those specified groups. When we
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The series I chose to analyze the representation of race, class, gender and sexuality in, is a series called “Modern Family”. The supreme allure and attraction of this series is the way it paints a typical “modern” family. In this series, we can clearly see how a joining of these groups is present, in order to show people that being different is ok. At the same time, they don’t simply show a perfect façade of the world, where equality is reached and discrimination is no more. They actually show how different groups face different kinds of problems and how they are handled. They present this to the world in a funny way, but at the same time, the serious side of the setting and image that is portrayed is in reality quite disturbing, as it shows how we still are as oppressed and close-minded as we have always been in regards to that department. It shows how as much as we think we progressed we still hold on to the belief or images we were taught to believe. The hit television series is loaded with giggles, day by day battles and life lessons as we are taken through the term of three interrelated families. All through the show it gives distinctive cases of race, ethnicity, class, gender character, and sexual introduction. The pilot episode of this serious is actually very important …show more content…
The first to be analyzed are the gay couple, whose names are Mitchell and Cam. Adequately to them being shown as a typical life of a gay couple, they are shown to a stereotypically feminine, fashion loving, self-centered homosexuals. Many of the comedy that are presented by those couple are jokes that include how most of their fights circle around ridiculous, shallow quarrels. One of the examples of this is how they fought over who is the one that gets to wear a shirt that is colored pink to a dinner “because wearing similar outfits would be an absolute travesty” ("Modern Family”). In addition to that, their close ring of associates and friends is entirely made up of feminine and colorful homosexual men. This also highlights how a certain group of people stick and stay close together. The main humor that is introduced by those two characters’ focusses around stereotypically “gay” complications. With the way discrimination against homosexuality is still present around the world, especially in in the US, this form of representation through media in that aspect only promotes the image and idea that all homosexual males are feminine, selfish, and worthless. An additional mishandling of stereotype representation is shown in “Gloria”, who is the lively, spiteful, Columbian wife of the father of the whole family, Jay. Gloria’s character denotes the narrow-minded outlook of what a typical Latin-American is. She got pregnant
Sandra Cisneros “Never Marry a Mexican” and Junot Diaz’s The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao are stories that reflect on the cultures in which the characters grew up in. In Never Marry, Clemencia, the narrator, reflects on her past sexual relations as well as her childhood. She speaks of her parents’ marriage and then transitions into her relationship with college professor and his son. In Oscar Wao, Yunior, the narrator, gives a second-hand retelling of Oscar’s experiences in New Jersey growing up as well as in the Dominican Republic. A person’s identity is largely influenced by their culture, this is especially the case in Hispanic cultures. The social constraints that these cultures place on social class, sexuality, and gender norms can be very detrimental to a person’s self-esteem.
Dines, Gail, and Jean McMahon Humez. Gender, Race, and Class in Media: A Text-reader. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 1995. Print.
The first people introduced are a couple, Agustin and Marcelo, that has been well established in Chicago, Illinois. Marcelo explained his struggle of being both gay and staying catholic because as a kid he prayed to god for a miracle to change him to be “normal”. Marcelo has accepted himself and continues to practice the religion even though Catholicism prohibits being gay. Another man named David described being teased in his school career for kissing another boy in the third grade because of his sexuality. He moved to New York City to get away from his childhood and to finally be happy in a place where he isn’t judged. This homophobia from young kids instigates violence in school that is learned from parents and from the community of others. The last person introduced in the film was a man who transitioned to be a woman that was rejected by her family and had to move out of her home for coming home with hair extensions. This form of violence caused Gabriela to abuse drugs and alcohol to deal with the pain of rejection. These three examples show how people have overcome the cultural normality, but have experienced all sorts of different
As a group, we believe that popular culture does in fact perpetuates stereotypes. Television is a main source of information of popular culture. Television has forever changed how humans have interacted with another and introduce a world of diversity and knowledge. But with this profit, television has also harbored negative aspects. As a group, we studied how racial stereotypes are portrayed in television. In the history of television, different racial and ethnic groups have been widely underrepresented and television itself has been overwhelming represented by white figures. And when racial groups are presented on TV, the characters are often played in limited roles based on stereotypes. A stereotype isn’t necessarily untrue, but it is an assumption based on an incomplete and complex ideas that are oversimplified into something that isn’t what it meant to be, and it’s usually negative. For example, African Americans are often depicted as violent or involved in some kind of criminal activity. Their characters often portrays a person who is always sassy and angry or that isn’t intelligent and won’t succeed in life and inferior to whites in some manner. Asian characters are
The author highlights the Latino stereotypes and their effects on those stereotyped and on society. By carrying out a satirical tone, the author is able to manifest how Mexicans are treated; thus, achieving this through the secretary’s rejection of each character represented. The satirical tone elucidates on how people may acknowledge their own prejudices and comprehend how Mexicans feel. Through the Mexican-American character, the author makes it clearly evident of an attempt to end prejudice in itself. The author illuminates the ludicrous hypocrisy behind labeling; this play serves to help society see the injustice of their opinions and to meet their
Boylorn, R. M. (2008). As seen on tv: An autoethnographic reflection on race and reality television. Critical Studies in Media Communication, 25 (4), 413-433.
Black male Image in Media The negative representations of black male image are readily visible and conveyed to the public through the news, film, music videos, reality television and other programming and forms of media. In the media, African American males are given a narrowed view of what they see of themselves. For example, African American characters with their pants hanging off their waist and underwear showing, to the super beyond belief athlete, or seeing a highly disproportionate number of African American faces are bombarded with negative images. In The Black Male Handbook: A Blueprint for Life.
commercial, magazines, books, and flyers to symbolize growth and sway viewers that life is well and full of great moments spent with anyone of their choosing. In today’s society, all different races are starting to come together and get along. For example “The purpose of this study is to analyze the portrayals of White children and African American, Hispanic, Native American and Asian (AHANA) children in television commercials in children’s programming. For the purposes of this study, skin tone and facial features were used as determinants of race” (Larson, 2002). At an early age, children were exposed to interracial relationships. Demott uses contrast by describing situations where people put up a front about interracial relationships being real while also giving their selves away. There are a lot of instances that reveal exactly what an advertisement or television show want its watchers to observe too. Behind much of the entertainments job, they do their best at getting into the viewer’s head to make them believe these can possibly be the life we
The media intents on trying at times not to be bias or favorable but when prompted to in accordance to time figure, “…gender and race often interact in how people are portrayed in the media” (Hazell and Clarke 9). With time it has been shown that the implications of mediated ideologies have improved but can still be portrayed as one ideal if one happens to take a closer look. In the early 1900’s, “Colfax and Sternberg found that in 54% of the magazine ads, Black people were portrayed in lower status occupations, ...
... supremacist gang, to rioting in an Asian owned grocery store, to finally brutally murdering someone. We observe as family ties become increasingly strained in every way, the viewer can easily conclude that Derek’s racism as well as his eventual influence on his younger brother ultimately contributed to their own downfall. As controversial as this movie maybe for the offensive language and brutal violence, it is a movie that deserves to be seen, and even discussed. It really provides insight into some factors within society that cannot be contained by the law or even deterred by even the harshest punishments. Even though American society is becoming more modernized as time goes by in terms of tolerance, racism will unfortunately always be prevalent in society and inevitably it will also lead some individuals to violently express their distorted mentalities.
A common trend in the entertainment industry today is the objectification of women in society. Sexualizing women are seen in media such as; movies, advertisement, television show and music video, where their main focus is providing the audience with an image of women as sexual objects rather than a human. This is detrimental to society since the media is producing social stereotypes for both genders, which can further result in corrupted social habits. Objectification in media are more focused on females than male, these false images of women leave individuals with the wrong idea of the opposite sex. As media continuously use sexual contents regarding women, the audience starts underestimating women. Specifically movies, it allows media to shape the culture’s idea of romance, sex and what seems
The work's topicality is characterized by the existence of the gender stereotypes in society, having generalization, and does not reflect individual differences in the human categories. Meanwhile, there is still discrimination on the labour market, human trafficking, sexual harassment, violence, women and men roles and their places in the family. Mass media offers us the reality, reduces the distance, but we still can see the negative aspects too. TV cultivates gender stereotypes, offering ideas about gender, relationships and ways for living. Such media ideas attach importance to many people in the society. Consequently, it is quite important identify gender stereotypes in the media, in order to prevent false views relating to gender stereotypes.
The media, through its many outlets, has a lasting effect on the values and social structure evident in modern day society. Television, in particular, has the ability to influence the social structure of society with its subjective content. As Dwight E. Brooks and Lisa P. Hébert write in their article, “GENDER, RACE, AND MEDIA REPRESENTATION”, the basis of our accepted social identities is heavily controlled by the media we consume. One of the social identities that is heavily influenced is gender: Brooks and Hébert conclude, “While sex differences are rooted in biology, how we come to understand and perform gender is based on culture” (Brooks, Hébert 297). With gender being shaped so profusely by our culture, it is important to be aware of how social identities, such as gender, are being constructed in the media.
In the essay “Beauty (Re)discovers the Male Body,” author and philosopher Susan Bordo discusses the history and current state of male representation in advertisements. While using her feminist background, Bordo compares and contrasts the aspects of how men and women are portrayed in the public eye. She claims that there has been a paradigm shift the media with the theory that not just women are being objectified in the public eye, but also men too. Since the mid-1970s, with the introduction of Calvin Klein commercials, men have started to become more dehumanized and regarded as sex symbols. In a similar fashion to how Bordo describes gender, race plays a similar role in the media. People of all different ethnicities and cultures are being categorized into an oversimplified and usually unfair image by the media over basic characteristics.
Gender stereotyping has been ongoing throughout history. The media has been distorting views by representing gender unrealistically and inaccurately. It created an image of what "masculinity" or "femininity" should be like and this leads to the image being "naturalized" in a way (Gail and Humez 2014). The media also attempts to shape their viewers into something ‘desirable’ to the norm. This essay will focus on the negative impacts of gender-related media stereotypes by looking at the pressures the media sets on both women and men, and also considering the impacts on children.