Images Of International Women

  • October 2019
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Images of International Women Class: Women and Peacemaking CRS-3242 Instructor: Dr. Anna Snyder By Carsten Kaefert (3012875)

Table of Contents Images of International Women.............................................................................................................1 Image 1: Women as Sex Objects.......................................................................................................1 Image 2: Miss Landmine Malanje.....................................................................................................2 Third World Women as Sex Objects..................................................................................................3 Empowerment through Cognitive Dissonance..................................................................................3 Conclusion.........................................................................................................................................4

Image 1: Women as Sex Objects

Illustration 1: Orientalist depiction of a woman as a 'eroticized, unclothed "native"'. © Lulu.com, http://www.lulu.com/items/volume_62/1241000/1241666/1/preview/dec.jpg (Retrieved: 2008-09-27)

Carsten Kaefert: Images of International Women→Image 1: Women as Sex Objects Page 1/4

Image 2: Miss Landmine Malanje

Illustration 2: Miss Landmine Malanje, Filomena Domingos Da Costa. ©Miss Landmine, http://www.miss-landmine.org/misslandmine_candidates.html (Retrieved: 2008-09-27)

Carsten Kaefert: Images of International Women→Image 2: Miss Landmine Malanje Page 2/4

Third World Women as Sex Objects In her critique of the Women in Development (WID) regime, employed by the World Bank and other international development agencies, Chowdhry describes (among others) an eroticizing, orientalist view on Third World women. It is this perspective that I chose – for a variety of reasons. First of all there is it's precedence in current society and popular culture. Chowdhry mentions sex tourism and post cards as examples, another one is illustration 1. It is taken from a calendar called Vintage Harem Girls, described by one online merchant as: „A sultry selection - fit for a sultan! Harem girls from yesteryear, Arab and Moorish courtesans, Bedouin beauties, veiled, a dozen topless or nude photo art portraits and vintage postcard prints...“1 It is pretty clear, that this is not just coincidentally demeaning, but almost intentionally so. Thus it is exemplary for a perspective that obviously has way more intent in it's marginalizing ways than the alternatives: Depicting a person as a sex object is a conscious act requiring at least some ill will, while the depiction of women reduced to traditional roles or as victims can happen subconsciously or even in good will. FishesEye Publishing, the publisher of the calendar containing illustration 1, capitalizes on publishing vintage photos, on which the copyright has run out. Out of several other publications bearing names like “Ethnic Tattoos”, “Mauresque Beauties” or “Ethnic Dancing Girls”, the above picture was chosen rather for it's file size than it's special demeaning qualities – it is just one of many

1 LuLu.com: 2008 Calendar - Vintage Harem Girls by FishesEye Publishing, http://www.lulu.com/content/1241666 (Retrieved: 2008-09-27)

Carsten Kaefert: Images of International Women→Third World Women as Sex Objects Page 3/4

reinstating age old views and cheaply profiteering off another humiliation of the depicted persons after the first one of being coerced to the taking of these images, as Chowdhry describes it.

Empowerment through Cognitive Dissonance On a first impression, illustration 2 seems to have similar qualities to the first picture: Both are obviously staged, both show on women posing for beauty rather than acting within their actual livelihood and both focus on their objects non-western cultural background. Nevertheless, the message they are conveying is fundamentally different: Illustration 2 is actually empowering. First of all, illustration 2 comes with the depicted womans name, Filomena Domingos Da Costa, which makes it by far less objectifying. Furthermore, on closer inspection one detail catches the eye: Miss Domingos Da Costa is missing her right leg. This points to the context of the image: It is a set photo of the Miss Landmine Angola 2008 beauty pageant. This is, where the cognitive dissonances begin: The terms beauty pageant and landmine do not usually appear together in one sentence, as well as severe injury and beauty usually are separate thoughts. By throwing these together and confronting the viewer with these perceived contrasts, the photo incites a process of thinking. The outcome is empowering and liberating. It places the women in the active role of survivors instead of victims2, thus taking the stigma of being landmine victims away from them. It invokes pride, thus enabling self-realization and expression3. And it also has outreaching effects: It raises awareness of the problem of landmines without repeating the usual pity-inducing imagery of the helpless African and thus without recreating a dichotomous colonial perspective. 2 Miss Landmine – News: http://www.miss-landmine.org/misslandmine_project.html (Retrieved: 2008-09-27) 3 Ibid.

Carsten Kaefert: Images of International Women→Empowerment through Cognitive Dissonance Page 4/4

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