India tops the chart in showing attractive women in its
movies and as much as 35 per cent of these female characters are shown with
some nudity, finds a first-ever UN sponsored global study of female characters
in popular films across the world.
The study, commissioned by the Geena Davis Institute on
Gender in Media, with support from UN Women and The Rockefeller Foundation,
reveals deep-seated discrimination, pervasive stereotyping, sexualisation of women
and their underrepresentation in powerful roles by the international film
industry.
Indian films, the study finds, have a significantly higher
prevalence of sexualisation of female characters and the movies score low in
depicting women in significant speaking roles and as engineers and scientists.
While women represent nearly half of the world's population,
less than one third of all speaking characters in films are female and UK-US
collaborations and Indian films are at the bottom of the pack.
Both, the American/British hybrid films (23.6 per cent) and
Indian films (24.9 per cent) show female characters in less than one-quarter of
all speaking roles. Even the frontrunners (UK, Brazil and South Korea) feature
female characters in 35.9-38 per cent of all speaking roles on screen.
Sexualisation of female characters in movies is a standard
practice across the global film industry and women are twice as likely as men
to be shown in sexually revealing clothing, partially or fully naked, thin, and
five times as likely to be referenced as attractive.
Indian films are third behind German and Australian movies
in showing females in "sexy attire" and at 25.2 per cent India tops
the chart in showing attractive females in its movies.
About 35 per cent of female characters in Indian movies are
shown with some nudity, the study finds. The prevalence of female directors,
writers and producers in the Indian films was also not at a very high number.
India had 9.1 per cent female directors, slightly above the
global average of 7 per cent, while its percentage of female writers was 12.1
per cent, significantly lower than the 19.7 per cent global average.
Female producers in India were only 15.2 per cent, way below
the 22.7 per cent global average. This data of gender prevalence behind the
camera translated into a gender ratio of 6.2 males to every one female in the
film industry in India.
The study also noted that when shown in professional roles,
females are largely absent from powerful positions. Women represent less than
15 per cent of business executives, political figures, or science, technology,
engineering, and/or math (STEM) employees.
In India, out of a sample size of 12 jobs onscreen in the
scientific and engineering field, 91.7 per cent were portrayed by males while
only 8.3 per cent were females."Viewers would be hard pressed to find
mediated examples of female executives on par with US's (India-born PepsiCo
Chief) Indra Nooyi, India's (ICICI bank chief) Chanda Kochhar, or Australia's
(businesswoman) Gail Kelly in our sample of films," the report added.
In the field of politics, only 12 women were shown at the
highest levels of local, state/provincial, or national governmental authority,
as against 115 males, a gender ratio of 9.6 to one.
Academy-award winning actor Davis, who is the founder and
chair of the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media said that media images
can also have a positive impact on people's perceptions.
"In the time it takes to make a movie, we can change
what the future looks like. There are woefully few women CEOs in the world, but
there can be lots of them in films.
"How do we encourage a lot more girls to pursue
science, technology and engineering careers? By casting droves of women in
STEM, politics, law and other professions today in movies," she added.
Conceiving of female CEOs, politicians, lawyers, judges, and
doctors, the study says, is the work of a creative writing moment but could
have important and lasting consequences for the next generation.
It added that when films featured a female director or
writer, the number of female characters on screen increased significantly.
One remedy to correct gender disparity on screen is to hire
more female filmmakers and call on film executives to have a heightened
sensitivity to gender imbalance and stereotyping on screen. Other key findings
of the study include that females are missing in action/adventure films.
The study analysed popular films released between January
2010 and May 2013 across the global film industries, including Australia, Brazil,
China, France, Germany, India, Japan, Russia, South Korea, US, UK, as well as
UK-US collaborations
Source: .outlookindia.com
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