Saturday, June 10, 2017

The Beautiful Sexy Women

Related imageThe cover of this month’s Women’s Health magazine features actress Cobie Smulders (Robin from How I Met Your Mother) posing topless, with only her arms covering her bare chest. If you find that surprising for a magazine called Women’s Health, consider the May cover of Golf Digest: It boasts a similar topless-with-strategic-cover-up photo of athlete Lexi Thompson.
To be honest, I can't say these covers surprise me. Nude photos of successful women make frequent appearances in the media. Women’s Health, along with CosmopolitanSports IllustratedMaxim, and a slew of other popular magazines regularly feature sexually explicit content and imagery.Related image
Although nude images on magazine covers have lost their power to shock, they're still a relatively recent phenomenon. The degree to which women are sexualized in magazines, in song lyrics, on television, in video games, on the Internet, in advertising, and in music videos today is unparalleled. As Dawn Hawkins, vice president of the National Center on Sexual Exploitation, describes it, “Yesterday’s pornography is today’s mainstream media.” Somehow, we have gotten to a point where a topless photo of a well-respected woman on the cover of a women’s health magazine barely raises eyebrows. Whether or not this is a positive development is a subject of much debate.Related image
In my experience, discussion of sexuality often hits a snag when the conversation turns to how the female body is represented in the media. For starters, the issue divides feminists. On one hand, there are those who actively campaign against any censorship of the female body—saying it's not women's bodies but rather society’s tendency to objectify them that's at issue. Female sexuality ought to be celebrated, and nudity in magazines encourages open discussion that empowers women.Image result for sexy american only of women images and article
On the other hand, there are those, like myself, who would say that it is disingenuous to think that the naked human body can be wholly separated from its sexual aspects, and that even if it could be, I'm not sure we'd want it to be. Sexual attraction is good and serves a great purpose, and I don't think desensitizing ourselves to it does us any favors. That being the case, the recklessness with which we discuss and depict female sexuality has had serious negative consequences on society, and women in particular—not the least of which is the present day reality that basic nonsexual functions of the female body (such as breastfeeding) have been distorted to the point that mothers feel the need to hide themselves in bathrooms in order to feed their babies.Related image
To even attempt a productive discussion about this topic, though, I must first clarify one thing: Opposing the hypersexualization of women in the media is not the same as denouncing or demonizing female sexuality. The female body is striking, beautiful, and awesome, in the most literal meaning of the word. I would not be writing this article if there were not something both incredible and formidable about female sexuality. And the fact that female sexuality is such a constant and controversial topic of discussion speaks to its magnificence.Related image
Female sexuality, like physical strength, is powerful. But, like physical strength, it can be abused, it can be exploited, and it can be used to hurt rather than to help. Sexuality, too, has its victims, and evidence suggests that women make up a surprisingly high percentage of that total. So what are responsible media outlets to do?Image result for sexy american only of women images and article
Enter Victoria Hearst. Granddaughter to the famed newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst (yes, that Hearst), Victoria raised the issue of Cosmo's hypersexualized covers and content with her family's media company years ago, with unsuccessful results.Now, Victoria has teamed up with the NCSE to launch a campaign devoted to educating people about the harmful effects of hypersexualization of women in today’s media. Ata press conference held last week, Hearst hosted a panel of experts to discuss the negative consequences of overly sexualized depictions of women, and the evidence is fairly damning.Image result for sexy american only of women images and article
Referencing a study from the American Psychological Association’s Task Force on the Sexualization of Girls (2010), psychiatrist Dr. Miriam Grossman, who has devoted her career to studying the impact of sexual media on youth, stated: “From a medical and psychological perspective, it is difficult to overstate the dangers to girls and young women of the lifestyle celebrated by [magazines such as] Cosmopolitan.” And she's not exaggerating. The list of negative consequences—physical, psychological, emotional, and cultural—that the APA reports is nothing short of staggering. “Ample evidence,” the report reads, “indicates that sexualization has negative effects in a variety of domains, including cognitive functioning, physical and mental health, sexuality, and attitudes.”Related image
While it's impossible to cover all of the report's findings here, a few consequences in particular deserve attention.
First, the APA found that sexualization, a worldview heavily focused on or shaped by sex, is linked to the mental health problems most common among women, including depression, low self-esteem, and—notably—eating disorders. Several studies suggest that the media plays a large role in shaping a woman’s body image and that girls exposed to sexualizing media are more likely to experience body dissatisfaction. Given that twenty million women (and ten million men) in the U.S. have suffered from a clinically significant eating disorder, and that anorexia nervosa has the highest mortality rate of any psychiatric disorder, the connection between eating disorders and the media should not be ignored.

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