Women in films 'equally sexualised between 13 and 39 years-old'
The film industry was found to perpetuate 'pervasive stereotyping of
women and girls', in a report commissioned by actress Geena Davis Less
than a third of all speaking roles in films across the globe are given
to women - and females are twice as likely as males to be
hypersexualised on camera, a UN-backed report has found.

Geena Davis, founder and
chair of the Geena Davis
Institute on Gender in Media |
The study found that although women represent half of the world's
population, just 30.9 per cent of all speaking characters in films are
women, while less than a quarter of the on-screen workforce is made up
of women (22.5 percent).
Commissioned by the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media, the
investigation looked at popular films across 11 countries, including the
UK, US and India.It concluded that "girls are nowhere to be 'scene'" in
an industry that is characterised by "deep-seated discrimination" and
"pervasive stereotyping of women and girls".
When women are portrayed in positions of employment, they represent
less than 15 percent of business executives, political figures, or
science, technology, engineering, and/or maths (STEM) employees.
But when it comes to hypersexualisation, girls and women are twice as
likely as boys and men to be shown in suggestive clothing or naked.
Meanwhile, a 13-year-old girl on-screen is as equally sexualised as a
39-year-old female character. Geena Davis, founder and chair of the
institute, said that the findings reflect wider-reaching problems in
international society. "The fact is - women are seriously
under-represented across nearly all sectors of society around the globe,
not just on-screen, but for the most part we're simply not aware of the
extent," she said.
"And media images exert a powerful influence in creating and
perpetuating our unconscious biases."
The Thelma and Louise actress suggested that changes on-screen could
go some way to catalysing change in the real world. "Media images can
also have a very positive impact on our perceptions. In the time it
takes to make a movie, we can change what the future looks like. There
are woefully few women CEOs in the world, but there can be lots of them
in films," she said. "How do we encourage a lot more girls to pursue
science, technology and engineering careers? By casting droves of women
in STEM, politics, law and other professions today in movies."
- The Independent
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