Kriti Foundation | Page 7

justified by the family. Her family gives her the identity and is the world for her. equal representation of men and women have taken place. For the advertising world, the sari clad, large bindi, mangalsutra and sindoor sporting women has become the Indian symbol of marriage. Women are mostly shown in the household set-up specifically kitchen and washroom. She is portrayed with a husband, two small kids and a nice home. She is interested in kitchen electronic devices(refrigerator, microwave) and healthy food products(soups, cholesterol lowering oils, fat free products) to meet her family’s needs, but keep them fit and healthy at the same time. Her need for an attractive body (calorie less diet, beauty products, anti-aging creams) is her need to maintain her husband’s interest and maintain her family’s unity and security. And surprisingly there is not much difference in this depiction between the east and west. In U.S. television commercials men and women appeared equally more often as central figures in prime time commercials. Women still predominantly appear in domestic settings advertising products used in the house and men are still preferred as narrators in the advertising world over women. In Europe which is still a little more traditional, women are still portrayed in the home, where they do not make important decisions or do important things, are dependent and need men's protection who regard them primarily as sexual objects and are not interested in women as people. Take Indian television soaps, the heroine is the obedient daughter in law who cares for elders, listens to husband and is the perfect mother. The scheming vamp, donning low cut blouses and colored hair is meant to look seductive and repulsive at the same time. In print advertisements pictures of women's bodies and body parts appear more often than pictures of men's bodies. And often women get a slightly tougher ride because the focus is on what they are wearing rather than what they have to convey in the advertisement. There is also another woman always - the mistress who has an affair with the hero, has a child who is brought home by the wife and all is well that ends well. Most movies and serials adopt this formula and this is acceptable to the viewer. Would any woman bear this mental torture in real life? The most surprising discovery is that in today's China, the image of Chinese women in the media is undergoing a subtle change. It is to a large extent influenced by the socio-economic and politicalideological changes in China. Rather than a literal portrayal of the “reality,” it is a symbolic representation of the Chinese women created through the interaction of party ideology, editorial policy, and readers, taste as well as the changing reality of Chinese women’s life and work. But the last four to five years are seeing an optimistic change in a section of the media. Women as gaining substantial ground on their male counterparts and breaking out of negative stereotyping. Role portrayals in commercials are more representative of contemporary women and are gradually becoming equal to men. The Indian Government, concerned over the indecent portrayal of women in the mass media, had instructed Ministry of Women and Child Development to constitute a committee for finalising modalities for media campaign on the issue. In the past women in television commercials have been portrayed as central figures only in commercials about household products. This committee decided to have a sustained media campaign to highlight positive aspects of women empowerment and against negative, indecent and stereotyped projection of women in movies, TV shows and advertisements. Hope it works! However, women are no longer being portrayed only as users in the commercials but they are also being depicted as product representatives and they are not depicted as often in subordinate positions. This does indicate that some changes in the direction of more The writer is Chief of Bureau, INDIA STRATEGIC • • • • • • • • • 2