Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Review: Video games and their music videos
Original music video:
Second edit of the music video:
The first video had more to do about the game DotA. But throughout the video, they start to show scenes of night clubs and beautiful women. They relate playing a video game to being at a night club with beautiful women. This sends a message to people watching (mostly men) that this game is awesome. Like we learned in Dreamworlds 2, women are used in the media to attract viewers with their sexuality. They will wear skimpy clothes and act like men want them to.
The second video shows more about beautiful women than it does about DotA. What makes this funny is that the guy is singing about the game DotA, meanwhile the woman is dancing on the screen doing her thing. The game is rarely shown in the music video. This change got the attention of a bigger audience than the first. I've had my own friends tell me that they like the second video better because you get to see more of the dancing woman.
Most of the media out there has women displayed as a sexual image. It is used to sell to men, and show women at a young age how they are seen. In this video game intro, they show men as big muscular warriors and display women with skimpy outfits where they emphasize their bodies.
In those scenes. A woman is portrayed as a stealthy assassin, one who sneaks up and attacks someone when they are unprepared. The man however goes into battle with big weapons. One guy even has his arm chopped off, and he still fights! Gender images are shown in this intro clip. Men are the dominant warriors and women are shown as not being able to fight fair.
Video games and their music videos reinforce the media's view on genders. In our society, men are supposed to be displayed as warriors and women as dancers or related to something sexual. It is how our games and such sell.
Thursday, May 22, 2008
Dream Worlds 2
Women in music videos will also become more sexualized. They are portrayed as wanting to be watched. They will then be portrayed as teases. But they will say no in some cases, but no does not mean no in the dreamworld. Initial refusal often leads to the wanting of the peruser. Women will be treated the way they are treated in music videos. This is seen as a norm in our society. A college study showed that 60% males and 40% females agreed that women provoke rape by their appearance. I believe it is wrong that women are pressured to conform to the women in these videos and ads. Seeing how women are treated in the media leads to these actions as norms. They can also lead to the mistreatment of women. If we change the way women are portrayed in the media, we can prevent the mistreatment and violence done to women.
Tough Guise
The media portrays violence as a norm. In movies, music videos, and other types of media, men commit acts of violence. When these acts are done, they receive little to none punishment. These acts of violence are put on to show a man's "tough guise". If they wanted to survive in society, these men would have to be tough. In our society, it is thought for men to be the dominant group. For these men to "fulfill" their role, they must become tough. They carry these actions out by becoming stronger, assert dominance, or even commit acts of violence. The media also de-genders violence. If does not make a big deal or mention if violence is caused by males, just because its a norm. But when females cause violence, it is considered almost a taboo. The media will explicitly mention if acts of violence are done by females. So basically, when a man produces violence, it is accepted. But when a woman produces violence, it is an outrage.
When violence is seen as a norm for men, it becomes seen as a threat when females commit violence. Our culture teaches men at a very young age that men have to prove their selves and get respect through violence and the "tough guy" pose. It is wrong that we accept violence as a norm for a man to prove he is a man. The media and culture play a big part in our lives and tell us that men must use violence, and sometimes sexual violence. It all comes down to masculinity equaling power, control, and dominance. Our society pressures men to become violent and dominant. This affects how men are seen and expected to act. Why must men become the "tough man" to be called a man? I believe the media in our culture teaches us and makes us believe we must act a certain way to be called a real man.
Sunday, May 18, 2008
Encountering the American Holocaust
Ward Churchill. Encountering the American Holocaust: The Politics of Affirmation and Denial. Oppression, Privilege, & Resistance. McGraw-Hill, 2004. Pg. 93-107.
In our basic education system, we never learn about the American Holocaust. When kids are taught about Native Americans, they are taught about either peace between Native Americans and settlers or the “Indian Wars”. It was taught that pilgrims came over peacefully and lived with Indians. And if there was no peace, that savage natives were attacking them. What we didn’t learn is that the American settlers were the ones savagely hunting down or killing Native Americans. When
The main argument would be why is the American Holocaust denied? In the basic education system, we are taught that relations between Native Americans and settlers were not that bad. In reality, the Native Americans were killed, forced to assimilate, and other things. This information is denied and stated false though, as explained in Encountering the American Holocaust. The American Holocaust should not be denied, and would be as wrong as saying the same about the Holocaust of the Jews.
I think it is wrong to deny or hide something like this. When another country does something bad to another country, we learn it in our general education. But when it comes to genocide and killings in
Thursday, May 15, 2008
Racial Formation
Michael Omi and Howard Winant. Racial Formation. Oppression, Privilege, & Resistance. McGraw-Hill, 2004. Pg. 115-142.
When race is mentioned, it is used to show that people are different. It also classifies people based on biological characteristic features. Race was used to scientifically classify humans based on these biological characteristics. These classifications are then used to prove that races have advantages and disadvantages. This however leads to the misrepresentation of people. Racial formations are formed from classifications like this. Omi and Winant define racial formation as the sociohistorical process where racial categories are created, inhabited, transformed and destroyed. It is part of everyday life and classifies people based on race and things like racial stereotypes. Racial stereotypes limit our expectations of a race to their “classified” stereotypes. For example, the Model Minority Myth about how all Asians are good at math.
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Five Faces Of Oppression
Young's article, Five Faces of Oppression, explains five types of oppression: exploitation, marginalization, powerlessness, cultural imperialism, and violence. Exploitation is used by the the establishment of a class system. Class systems are used to separate/classify people, which in turn leads to those in power discriminating against those without it. Marginalization causes racial oppression. This is when people are racially divided and it is determined who can work and who can't. Powerlessness is when people are oppressed simply by not having the power. Those in power exercise it over the powerless, giving them orders and telling them what they must do. Cultural imperialism is when the dominant group's experience and culture is established as norms. When the dominant group has the power, they oppress those who do not share their culture. The last oppression is Violence. Violence is used to oppress people through damage, humiliation or physical harm to a person. These five types of oppression are used to discriminate and assure dominance over those who are being oppressed.
I believe the main arguments in Five Faces Of Oppression was to categorize the five different ways the people without power are oppressed. In all five of these categories, the dominant group who oppresses people are the ones with power. Young's explanation of oppression shows us how a group who possesses power can control and keep down those who do not have power. Those who possess the power also gain it through ascribed status.
I agree with Young's argument that only those with power are the ones who can oppress. Without power, people cannot create class systems, determine who can work, have the power to tell people what to do, make others accept their culture or be allowed to commit violence. These are all traits that the dominant group in power has. Without power, people are subjugated to the five categories of oppression. I think it is wrong that those who control power use it to oppress others. Those who possess the power should try to help those without it.
As a minority, I can see and understand how the dominant group oppresses those without power. But as a male, I get a small sense of what it is like to be in the dominant group. I believe that racial, gender, class and other groups that I can identify with, can be applied to Young's argument. It is explained that these five types of oppression are applied to different groups, which in turn gives them different names; racism, sexism, classism, herterosexism, ageism, etc. The dominant group in our culture would be white and male. Young argues that those with power are the dominant group. In my case, I am not part of the dominant group when it comes to race, but I am when it comes to gender.