mamba
Legend
did she buy the book for the cover, or for the story?When men are being accused of sexism because they make art featuring scantily clad and well proportioned women or because they are buying such material
did she buy the book for the cover, or for the story?When men are being accused of sexism because they make art featuring scantily clad and well proportioned women or because they are buying such material
Furthermore, people can like and buy things that contain something not-so-great! That's a real thing that actually happens! And even further, consider things like Barbie dolls. They portray an outright impossible beauty standard, and help reinforce sexist stereotypes. There are also plenty of children who played with such dolls despite not having a sexist bone in their body. It's almost like the issue isn't one of "do people buy X" but rather "why is it 99.9% of our options are X and X alone?"
I would like to know how you would tell the difference?
If you look at images of sexualised images of men aimed at women (such as the covers of romance novels, or Magic Mike/Chippendales, they are frequently very similar if not identical to what gets classed as power fantasies, for men. Similarly female models women in magazines aimed at women are frequently athletic and showing more skin than they would in everyday situations.
Both men and women like sexy, athletic attractive people and art has always depicted that, although tastes may change over the centuries, sometimes pale skin is attractive, other times a tan, sometimes a fuller figure, etc.
That isn't true, though.Because X sells, and the market reflects what people buy.
People like idealised fantasies, which might well be impossible beauty standards.
That's also a pretty good point. Old Harlequin Romance novels having Fabio shirtless on them worked to draw in purchasers because it was a clear sign of it being a romance novel.did she buy the book for the cover, or for the story?
But you’re missing the point of the argument.
The point is to deflect from the actual issue and endlessly nit pick specific examples until you finally give up in exhaustion.
If this example doesn’t achieve that goal, we only have to wait until another example is used and then the cycle stats again.
That isn't true, though.
And they ABSOLUTELY DO. Robert Pattinson is another great example of a slender, nonthreatening, physique being broadly lusted over.
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But it doesn't reflect what people necessarily want. That's the whole point of what I said.Because X sells, and the market reflects what people buy.
Who gets to define what ideals are used?People like idealised fantasies, which might well be impossible beauty standards.
Here in the United States, Armour makes hot dogs(This topic also annoys me as my browser tells me I'm spelling 'armour' wrong every time I type it.)