culture and media influence

    Cards (19)

    • some gender-role behaviours are culturally specific,
      therefore we can assume that the influence of shared norms and socialisation is decisive ( as suggested by SLT)
    • Cultural differences - Gender
      the earliest cross-cultural studies of gender roles was carried out by Margret Mead of tribal groups on the island of New Guinea
    • How were the Arapesh in Marget Meads Cross-culture studies?
      gentle and responsive (similar to the common UK stereotype of feminitiy)
    • How were the Mundugmor in Margret Meads cross-culture studies on gender?
      aggressive and hostile ( similar to the common UK stereotype of masculinity)
    • How were the Tchambuli in Margret Meads's cross-culture studies on gender
      the women were dominant and they organised village like; the men were passive and considered to be 'decorative' ( the reverse of UK stereotype )
    • What did Margret Mead's cross-cultural studies on gender suggest?
      there may not be a direct biological relationship between sex and gender, gender roles may be culturally determined.
      • the extent to which innate behaviours are expressed is largely through gender norms
    • Cultural similarities
      David Buss's cross-cultural similarities in gender roles
      • found consistent patterns in mate preferences in 37 countries
      • in all cultures women sought men who would offer wealth and resources
      • men looked for youth and attractiveness
    • the media provide role models with whom children may identify and want to imitate.
    • Rigid stereotypes
      evidence that the media do provide very clear gender stereotypes that are quite rigid:
      • men are independent, ambitious 'advice-givers'
      • women are dependant, unambitious 'advice-seekers'
    • rigid sterotypes (TV advert study)
      Furnham
      • found that men are morelikely to be shown in autonomous familial roles withing domestic settings.
      • suggesting that media may playa roles in reinforcing widespread social stereotypes
    • self-efficacy
      seeing other people perform gener-approraite behaviours increase the child belief that they are capable in carrying out such behaviours in the future.
    • What were the 3 tribes Mead looked at?
      • Arapesh
      • Mundugmor
      • Tchambuli
    • Criticism of meads research into culture and gender roles:
      Observer bias
      • not separating her own opinions from her description and generalising based on a relatively short period of study.
      • follow-studies argued that Mead's findings were flawed as she had been misled by some of her participants, and her preconceived notions influenced her observations.
    • research into culture and gender having imposed etic
      research is undertaken by 'Western' researchers who take indigenous populations to be their main object of study.
      • theories and methods have been developed in the West, imposing their interests and understandings
      • IMPOSED ETIC - western ways of doing research that is assumed to be universal, may be meaningless when transferred.
      • therefor research must include one member of the local population.
    • The Nature or Nurture debate in gender in culture research
      does not solve the nature/nurture debate but provides insight
      • cannot ignore environmental factors as soon as you are born you are influenced by these gender-role expectation
      • making it difficult to determine where nature stops and nurture begins
      • likely it a constant interaction between both influences
    • there is a correlation not a causation between media and gender:
      it's difficult to establish cause and effect
      • maybe that media output reflects the established social norms around males and females.
      • Control groups of children who haven't been exposed to media are not available for comparison
    • The Notel study (Supporting medial influence)
      1960's Canada
      • extensive surveys around the town to assess the behaviour and attitudes of the population before the introduction of television
      • also collected data from the neighbouring towns that had access to TV - Unitel ( one channel )/ Multitel ( several channels)
      • after 2 years all three towns were surveyed again
    • The Notel Study Findings ( Media and Gender)
      gender-stereotypical attitudes among children of the three towns changed over two years
      • In the beginning, the children in Notel and Unitel displayed fewer sex-type views and stereotypical behaviour compared to Multitel.
      • In the end, evidence of stereotypes of behaviours increases for the children of Notel.
    • Counter stereotypes in the media
      In recent years there have been many examples of counter-stereotypes in the media which challenge traditional notions
      • female gender stereotype was reduced when seeing women in non-stereotypical roles but pre-adolescent boys' stereotypes became stronger
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