Framing the Feminine - depictions of women in Indian film.

Authors Avatar by simran2089 (student)

Framing the Feminine in Media: A Sight Unseen

Visions of woman are contaminated by male-defined notions

of the truth of femininity. This is true not only of the negative cultural

images of women (prostitute, demon, medusa, bluestocking, vagina

dentate) but also of positive ones (woman as nature, woman as

nurturing mother, or innocent virgin, or heroic amazon . . .). Woman

is always a metaphor, dense with sedimented meanings.

Traditionally the entire world is male. 'Man' means the whole human race, and 'woman' is just a part of it. But think 'in female' for a moment. Imagine that everything you have ever read uses only female pronouns, she, her, etc for both men and women. Recall that most of the voices on radio and faces on TV are female, especially when important events are shown in the news.

Imagine that women are the leaders, the power centres and if you are tempted to laugh and say that it would lead to catastrophe; ask yourself where we are now?

 Men are shown in films only in their natural roles as husband and father, or else as whores and very nasty persons. Men are shown only in their natural functions of trying to attract women and making the world a comfortable place for women. Imagine that countless films show men as simple-minded little sex objects, and you despair of finding a strong role-model for your little boy (for whom you see other futures than slut, bitch or house-husband). Imagine that the women in charge of the film industry use their power to ridicule the men's liberation movement, presenting them in films as a bunch of frustrated studs, deluded into thinking they can be women, burning their jockstraps and waving signs but always ending up in the boudoir of a condescending woman, always giving up the struggle and being happily subservient to her.

Then imagine that if you complain you are given the biological explanation: a female's genitals are compact and internal, protected by her body. A man's genitals are exposed and must be protected from attack. His vulnerability requires sheltering thus, in films, men must not be shown in ungentle-manlike professions.

Join now!

        I hope by now it is obvious that women must be shown in a much wider variety of roles. Their characterization must have heroism and human dignity expressed in fields besides homemaking, loving a man, and bearing children. Women must be shown as active, not passive; strong women shouldn't constantly face ridicule and unhappy endings. Women should be shown in adventures which don't revolve around sexual attraction for a man; or working with other women without cattiness. Men will become more sensual in sex role shows many of the films that I have seen, where the hero somehow makes love ...

This is a preview of the whole essay