Who doesn't have at least one television at home these days? The answer is obvious. Whether we watch it a lot or a little, television is still present in our homes and for better or worse everyone, at least once a day, has to deal with it. Indeed, it is also, and above all, through television that stereotypes have spread, taking root deeply, influencing both gender.
In television, women are reduced to objects, almost without exception. The vulgar portrayal consolidates old clichés and makes the position of women in society more difficult.
It is an interesting journey and there is no risk of getting bored. It winds through stereotypes and cliches and nothing is enough to not fall into it. There is the housewife, the mother, the naive girl, the girl next door, the intellectual, the vamp, the femme fatale, the evil sister. And also the mother-in-law, the old maid, the hysterical, the gossip girl, the happy girl, the nerd. But that’s not even the tip of the iceberg.
Here are some of the most used cliches used in television!
- The female lead is pure, naive and so innocent that she doesn't even know what is right or wrong. Everyone (family included) will take advantage of her. [Imlie season 2]
- The heroine will always be in traditional clothes. Otherwise she is the villain. [Lakshmi & Malishka from Bhagya Lakshmi]
- Her family is poor and in need of money, which leads most of time to blackmail and wedding with the male lead who is super rich. [Khushi from IPKKND]
- Whenever the heroine trips and falls, she always lands magically in the hero's arms and they will look at each other in the same awkward position till the next episode. [Anvi from Naamkaran]
- The typical ‘bahu’ ( and other ladies) will wander in the house looking all beautiful and even go to sleep wearing loads of make up and with nearly 8kg of jewellery on. [Gopi Bahu from SNS]
- Their professional role is short lived or brought up only in case of money problem. Lack of ambitious working women in TV shows successfully create and reinforce misleading images of female in real society. [Priya from BALH2]
Between stereotypes and clichés, used and abused, there is no doubt in saying that, if the female characters were as it is depicted in tv, the world would be an even stranger place than it is.
Check out in the next post some female characters who can be hailed as alpha female.
comment:
p_commentcount