Journal
INDIAN JOURNAL OF GENDER STUDIES
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS INDIA PVT LTD
DOI: 10.1177/09715215231210530
Keywords
Culture; media; stereotype; social reality; focus group
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There has been a shift in the portrayal of women in Indian media, from a traditional and submissive image to a more professional and empowered representation. This study explores whether such changes are positively perceived and if they have an impact on the status of women in India. The study finds that the younger generation, Gen Z, appears to be challenging traditional gender perceptions, while the older generation, Gen X, is more bound to old gender structures. The study highlights the complexities and dilemmas surrounding gender stereotypes and the portrayal of women in Indian media.
There has recently been a shift in the portrayal of women in Indian media, from a domestic background and docile image to a more professional and empowered representation. This study explores whether such changed portrayals in the media are also positively perceived and if there is an impact on the status of women in the social reality of India. The study examined gender perceptions through focus group discussions with participants from Gen X and Gen Z cohorts. Gen Z, conditioned in an age of technology and liberalisation, was expected to have different gender perceptions than Gen X, conditioned in a pre-liberalised traditional India. The discussions revealed the participants' complexities, dilemmas and compromises regarding gender stereotypes and the modern versus traditional portrayal of women in Indian media. While Gen X participants were bound to old gender structures and equations, the iconoclastic Gen Z participants appeared to be onsetting a change in gender perceptions of India.
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