I don’t ask this question to imply there isn’t a problem. I think there is. So would most people. But what exactly is it?
On Wednesday, the Advertising Standards Authority ruled against an advert from the clothing retailer Missguided (which had appeared on London Underground posters):
Because the ad objectified women, we concluded that [it] was likely to cause serious offence.
If an advert features an attractive model, he or she is not there to be ignored — but to be viewed alongside, and associated with, the product. Using one object of desire to sell another cannot be anything but objectifying. However, no one’s seriously suggesting that we ban the use of models altogether.
The real issue, of course, is sexualisation. In their ruling, the ASA judge that “the sexually suggestive styling and pose would be seen as presenting women as sexual objects.”
Why does bringing sex into it make the difference between tolerable and intolerable objectification? Well, one could defer to social norms about what sex should be for. However, that might imply traditional or even religious standards of morality — not something that government agencies go for these days.
There’s a less contentious narrative around choice and empowerment. The argument is that the objectification of women for public consumption warps the way in which all women and girls are viewed by others (especially men) thus compromising their individual autonomy and security.
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