Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Deconstructing the Loaded Word: The Advantage of the Feminist Critic. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
The term "feminist" is misused in the media to appear proactive when the loaded word is often merely used to draw in an audience. The "feminist" as media bait is deadly to women, but the problem is ignored and dismissed by the media. It continues to perpetuate myths about women in order to serve its own purposes. This 5 page paper explores the issue and argues for the feminist critic as a powerful weapon. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JV57_JVfemloadedword.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
term "feminist" is misused in the media to appear proactive when the loaded word is often merely used to draw in an audience. Wakeman calls the word "media bait." What
she is referring to is not only the word, but any female issue that is somehow now attached to feminism and is used by all media to draw an audience
while perpetuating myths about women. Such myths have deadly consequences in the real world, and compared to those who have usurped the
loaded word in the media, there are few people around to stop it. Mainstream media does not accept responsibility for the damage it is causing; the need to compete is
all it sees. As such, it is the feminist critics job to take back the loaded word and present feminism properly by continuing to deconstruct the male voice inherent in
the media. Considering the monumental task, if only a single female is reached, she has done something profound. The Problem Defined
The problem is complex and far reaching to women of all ages. The most notable of these is how body image is represented
in the media as a means of marginalizing and objectifying women. Burke reports that young girls are getting the wrong coding about
what feminism means because of the way media "discourses incorporate feminist perspectives on anorexia into their narratives on the dieting practices of actresses and celebrities" (Burke 316). Burkes study found
that the media uses feminist rhetoric to define how females should look and young women are responding with anorexia, paranoias and psychoses. Burkes study found that because of media exposure,
...