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Media
needs to step up coverage on gender issues all year round
Tawana Kupe
December 04, 2006
http://www.civicus.org/new/media/16DaysCampaign-TawanaKupe.doc
Media did not invent
gender inequalities or any form of social inequality for that matter.
Yet media is central to both knowingly and unwittingly promoting
gender inequalities. By providing a particular set of representations,
media feeds off and feeds into social assumptions and practices
that ultimately undermine the advancement of women.
Media is central to how
people understand themselves and those around them. Media is a social
institution that ultimately reflects power relations in that society.
A South African National Editors Forum (SANEF) study found out that
there is a glass ceiling for women in the media. This was no surprise
to me. It simply confirmed that one area where transformation has
not happened and is not going to happen quickly is in the media.
Attempts to strengthen the role of women in the media have been
minimally successful. Around 2000, media houses aggressively cut
costs and sharpened their commercial strategies. Times Media Limited
(now Johnnic Communications) canned its attempt to launch the first
sports daily, and with it the first woman editor of a daily. As
Independent Newspapers restructured and many women editors lost
their positions.
While it was in the context of commercially driven restructuring
that women lost editorial positions, except for a few recent cases,
these were not regained. Rather, black men have been the beneficiaries
of this commercially driven transformation in the media industry.
It appears that there are gender, race and class elements to the
dynamics of the media-s transformation.
These dynamics extend past who is making images in the media to
what images editors are making, especially with regard to gender.
As the commercial strategies intensified with men as editors, dominating
ownership and management structures, it appears that women are being
'undressed- more and more.
In the last few years, there are more images of women represented
in the skimpiest of clothing in the media than before. Images of
women that emphasise their bodies and flesh in a sexualised fashion
or as objects for men to 'admire- have increased.
The back page photo has become permanent and editors ignored all
attempts to persuade them to drop them, driven by the desire to
attract audiences. Beauty contests have increased, so have social
pages, which focus on women-s bodies and dress, as well as
female celebrities who are 'sexy- or dressed 'provocatively-.
As media content becomes ever sexier, it appears that attention
to constitutional imperatives for gender equality is reduced to
official platitudes or the month of August in particular 9 August
National Women-s Day and the 16 Days of Activism.
Ironically, during these periods the representation of women as
sexual objects does not diminish, it seems to increase because there
is more commercial advertising related to women.
It is also true that during this period there is more content about
the status of women and issues of gender equality. While such focus
is welcome, thereafter there is a sharp decline and a return to
business as usual.
Between 9 August and 16 Days of Activism, beauty contests occupy
the media and commercial advertising picks up as the festive spending
picks up. It appears therefore that the intense periods of concentration
on women-s issues are in fact a ghetto. It can be argued that
media is shedding crocodile tears while actually making money. A
significant amount of the content is actually advertorials or supplements,
not analytical or investigative.
It is a public secret that the Commission on Gender Equality (CGE)
is unknown partly because the media does not cover it sufficiently,
and partly because it seems to do nothing that raises its profile
and to tackle cases of gender inequality. During the Zuma rape trial
issues arose that have grave implications for gender equality, which
the CGE seemed to treat with a cautiousness that borders on doing
nothing.
One would expect in August and during the 16 days of activism analytical
stories on the CGE and the Office on the Status of Women, Children
and the Disabled-s activities or lack thereof.
The editorial content during August tends to focus on the achievements
of elite women, be formalistic about rights and eschew the everyday
manifestations of gender inequalities and unequal power relations.
It does nothing therefore to relate the constitutional rights to
people-s everyday experiences, which could inform them of
those rights so they can exercise them.
During the 16 days of Activism, the tendency is to focus on violence
in a somewhat decontextualised fashion. To be sure, it is important
to expose the levels and types of endemic and escalating violence
that women and children face because in Southern Africa one can
characterise gender based violence as a low intensity civil war.
The media-s coverage of 16 Days of Activism and gender-based
violence should link violence to its underlying cause, which is
gender inequalities and power relations in which women and children
are victims. Media coverage should explore contradictions between
increasing official discourses and institutional set ups, with failure
to create conditions for equality that women across the social spectrum
can use to transform their lives.
Ultimately, all social institutions, including the media, need to
change to play a different and more transformative role in which
issues of gender equality are mainstreamed and not ghettoised in
August and November/December.
* Tawana Kupe is Head of the School of Literature, Languages
and Media Studies at the University of Witwatersrand. This article
is part of a special series of articles produced by the Gender links
Opinion and Commentary Service for the Sixteen Days of Activism
on Gender Violence.
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