A recent White House Council
Report on Women and Girls called attention to sexual assault on college
campuses and encouraged continued research on this important public health
problem. Media that sexually objectify women have been identified by feminist
scholars as encouraging of sexual assault, but some researchers question why
portrayals that do not feature sexual assault should affect men's attitudes
supportive of violence against women.
Guided by the concepts of specific and
abstract sexual scripting in Wright's (Communication Yearbook 35:343-386, 2011)
sexual script acquisition, activation, application model of sexual media
socialization, this study proposed that the more men are exposed to
objectifying depictions, the more they will think of women as entities that
exist for men's sexual gratification (specific sexual scripting), and that this
dehumanized perspective on women may then be used to inform attitudes regarding
sexual violence against women (abstract sexual scripting).
Data were gathered
from collegiate men sexually attracted to women (N = 187). Consistent
with expectations, associations between men's exposure to objectifying media
and attitudes supportive of violence against women were mediated by their
notions of women as sex objects. Specifically, frequency of exposure to men's
lifestyle magazines that objectify women, reality TV programs that objectify
women, and pornography predicted more objectified cognitions about women,
which, in turn, predicted stronger attitudes supportive of violence against
women.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/GLv6UF
By: Wright PJ1, Tokunaga RS2.
- 1The Media School and Kinsey Institute, Indiana University, 1229 East 7th St., Bloomington, IN, 47405, USA. paulwrig@indiana.edu.
- 2Department of Communicology, University of Hawaii, Manoa, HI, USA.
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