September+22+-+Field+work+Women+in+the+World

Today we spent the day with ten junior girls looking at images of women and girls in the media, particularly print media - those ubiquitous women’s and girls’ fashion and lifestyle magazines - and thinking about how destructive they are to us as people - men and women We started by looking at a stack of magazines, from //CosmoGirl// and //Seventeen// to //US// and //Vanity Fair.// The girls made two piles of images - a stack of healthy and positive pictures, the so-called “normal” women, and a stack of photos of über-thin women in impossible clothing doing unbelievable things. We had a great conversation as we looked at these magazines. Our exploration of these images took at short break when Sarah, an intern at the [|Chicago Women’s Health Center], came to talk to us about the work that they do. The collective has been in existence since 1975 and provides amazing health care for women in Chicago. She joined our conversation about the media, and our discussion turned to issues of domestic violence and the statistics that a battered woman, on average, will be hit 30 times before she calls the police. That she will return to her abuser seven times before she leaves him for good. We talked about violence against women, abortion services and reproductive justice (their word), counseling, and the transgendered and their difficulties finding health care. It was very interesting to the girls and an excellent segue into our little film festival.
 * To Begin**

media type="youtube" key="gUsKIApTewQ&hl=en&fs=1" height="263" width="323" We showed five short films and one longer piece. We started with the five films produced for [|The Dove Campaign for Real Beauty]. Starting with the first “True Colors,” and then screening “Evolution,” “Onslaught,” “Amy,” and “Hair.” I have a hard time watching “True Colors” without tearing up; maybe it’s the fact that I have three daughters or maybe it’s because I always wanted to change my own body (too flat, hair too straight, blond eyebrows and lashes) that it hits home. But it will, without fail, make me cry. “Evolution”, “Onslaught”, and “Hair” make you gasp at the extent of the advertising and how unreal these women really are (really!) but it’s “Amy” that produces the smile and the “awww” from the girls. When the title comes up that reminds us that even though Amy can find 12 things wrong with her appearance, the boy wistfully calling for Amy can’t find one, we all melt. It’s the dream. That the male gaze is less critical than our own. These are really powerful - but then! Top the festival off with a viewing of “[|Killing Us Softly 3]” a 34 minute presentation from Jean Kilbourne, the filmmaker who created the first Killing Us Softly almost 30 years ago. She makes a connection between the objectification of women in advertising and violence against women, between the hyper-sexualization of children and teens in advertising to the high rate of teen pregnancy. Her argument is compelling in the face of so many examples. In fact, right after lunch, one of the memebers of the group said we needed to all look at Pink’s video for her song “[|Stupid Girls.]“ Amazing to watch it as we start to think about gender and power.
 * The Film Festival**

So what to do? Back to the pile of images already culled and four large pieces of black posterboard - the young women in our group created collages that show how women are treated as objects (breasts, backsides, torsos, legs), how women are depicted as powerless or victims (the pout, the aggressive male looming, infantilized clothing or props, dead), and how IN-frequently we are shown as having real sized bodies with real sized parts. They responded to questions in writing, and we put their responses and their collages on the bulletin board outside room 477 and the locker rooms. And the conversations that have already taken place around that board have been amazing - Duane, pied piper of Parker, explaining to a group of boys how it was not just pictures of HOT girls but that these images actually insulted them as men - a young woman’s voice asking loudly and over and over, “Who did these? Who did these?” until I came out of my room. “These are amazing! Did you do these all by yourself? This is so excellent.” - The girls who created them explaining to their friends what the represent. So we like those magazines. We like the clothes. But… they are really destructive to who we are UNLESS we are aware of the semiotic potential of these images. Here are the rest
 * The Action and Reaction**