Beautiful Brown Skin

Brown Beauty ◽  
2018 ◽  
pp. 62-103
Author(s):  
Laila Haidarali

Chapter 2 studies the rise of consumer advertising with a focus on two products geared toward girls and women. The chapter examines advertisements for dolls and for cosmetics that circulated broadly throughout the 1920s in mass media newspapers and literary magazines. Such analysis finds the rise of a consumer-based discourse on brown beauty that linked displays of brown beauty with the New Negro ideology of “race progress.”

2011 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 186-191 ◽  
Author(s):  
Malini Ratnasingam ◽  
Lee Ellis

Background. Nearly all of the research on sex differences in mass media utilization has been based on samples from the United States and a few other Western countries. Aim. The present study examines sex differences in mass media utilization in four Asian countries (Japan, Malaysia, South Korea, and Singapore). Methods. College students self-reported the frequency with which they accessed the following five mass media outlets: television dramas, televised news and documentaries, music, newspapers and magazines, and the Internet. Results. Two significant sex differences were found when participants from the four countries were considered as a whole: Women watched television dramas more than did men; and in Japan, female students listened to music more than did their male counterparts. Limitations. A wider array of mass media outlets could have been explored. Conclusions. Findings were largely consistent with results from studies conducted elsewhere in the world, particularly regarding sex differences in television drama viewing. A neurohormonal evolutionary explanation is offered for the basic findings.


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