| Literature DB >> 21765585 |
Laramie D Taylor1, Tiffany Setters.
Abstract
The impact of exposure to media representations of aggressive, attractive, female protagonists on audiences' gender role expectations for women was explored through a laboratory experiment with 122 undergraduates from a large university on the west coast of the United States. Participants viewed a segment of a major Hollywood motion picture that featured a female protagonist who was either highly attractive or less attractive and either highly aggressive or not aggressive. Viewing clips featuring a female protagonist who was both aggressive and stereotypically attractive led to greater endorsement of stereotypically feminine and stereotypically masculine gender role expectations for women. The effect on endorsement of stereotypically masculine expectations was partially mediated by the perception that the protagonist was a good role model for women. Although women endorsed both feminine and masculine gender role expectations for women more strongly than men, the effects of exposure to aggressive, attractive, female protagonists were similar for both male and female participants. Results are discussed in terms of gender stereotype activation and superwoman expectations for women.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21765585 PMCID: PMC3116131 DOI: 10.1007/s11199-011-9960-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sex Roles ISSN: 0360-0025
Means and standard deviations of study variables relative to participant gender and experimental condition
| Protagonist neither attractive nor aggressive | Protagonist attractive, not aggressive | Protagonist aggressive, not attractive | Protagonist attractive & aggressive | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male ( | Female ( | Male ( | Female ( | Male ( | Female ( | Male ( | Female ( | |
| Protagonist is a good role model for women | 2.00a (.33) | 2.0 a (.22) | 3.17ab (.30) | 3.25ab (.26) | 2.42ab (.30) | 2.50ab (.28) | 3.57b (.23) | 3.93b (.27) |
| Protagonist attractiveness | 2.40a (.55) | 3.68a (.37) | 6.75b (.50) | 7.69b (.43) | 2.73a (.52) | 3.50a (.46) | 8.19b (.38) | 8.13b (.45) |
| Feminine gender role expectations for women | 3.60 (.16) | 3.81 (.11) | 3.53 (.15) | 3.84 (.13) | 3.51 (.15) | 3.65 (.14) | 3.73 (.11) | 4.38 (.13) |
| Masculine gender role expectations for women | 2.74 (.19) | 3.27 (.13) | 2.93 (.18) | 3.12 (.15) | 2.98 (.18) | 2.80 (.16) | 3.32 (.13) | 3.77 (.16) |
Each cell contains the cell mean; quantities in parentheses are standard deviations. For “Protagonist is a good role model for women,” as well as individual items in Gender Role Expectations measures, scale range was 1 (strongly disagree) – 5 (strongly agree); for protagonist attractiveness, scale range was 1 (not at all attractive) – 10 (very attractive). Means in the same row with different subscripts are significantly different at p < .05
Perceived attractiveness and appropriateness of movie protagonist as a role model and endorsement of GRE for women among female and male study participants
| Women ( | Men ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Perceived physical attractiveness of female movie protagonist | 5.64 (2.90) | 5.70 (2.92) |
| Endorsement of female movie protagonist as a good role model | 2.86 (1.35) | 2.96 (1.10) |
| Endorsement of stereotypically feminine gender role expectations for women | 3.88a (.065) | 3.59b (.074) |
| Endorsement of stereotypically masculine gender role expectations for women | 3.24a (.078) | 3.00b (.088) |
Quantities in parentheses represent standard errors. Means in the same row with differing subscripts are significantly different at α = .05, two-tailed
Endorsement of GRE for women after viewing a film representation of a protagonist who was stereotypically attractive or not and aggressive or not
| Neither attractive nor aggressive | Attractive, but not aggressive | Not attractive, but aggressive | Attractive & aggressive | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Feminine gender role expectations for women | 3.69a b (.10) | 3.69a b (.10) | 3.56a (.10) | 4.00b (.087) |
| Masculine gender role expectations for women | 3.03a (.12) | 3.03a (.11) | 2.88a (.12) | 3.55b (.10) |
| Protagonist is a good role model | 2.02b (.21) | 3.21a (.20) | 2.44b (.21) | 3.75a (.18) |
Quantities in parentheses represent standard errors. Means in the same row with differing subscripts are significantly different at α = .05, two-tailed
Participant gender was included in the analysis and exerted a main effect on GRE as reported in Table 2; no effect of gender through interaction with movie type was observed, however; participant gender was therefore omitted from the table
Items for measuring gender role expectations (GRE) for women
| Stereotypically masculine GRE | Stereotypically feminine GRE |
|---|---|
| It is important for a woman to: | It is important for a woman to: |
| • use the people in her social network as contacts to help her get ahead. | • make significant efforts to emotionally bond with the people in her social network. |
| • know it is more important to give “practical advice” rather than emotional comfort to a troubled female friend. | • “be there” emotionally for her female friends. |
| • prefer to do most things on her own with little input from her parents and family. | • spend much of her free time catching up with friends and family. |
| • abide by the motto, “All is fair in love and war.” | • remember that kindness and compassion are |
| • do everything it takes to climb the hierarchical ladder in her chosen career. | • set significant time aside as a student to help fellow students understand the course material if she “gets it” and they do not. |
| • actively pursue an education and aim for top academic honors. ( | • be sympathetic and tender while working as a community service volunteer. |