posters – Bad Reputation A feminist pop culture adventure Wed, 13 Apr 2011 08:00:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.6 37601771 Found Feminism: “Tomorrow When The War Began” Film poster on the London Underground /2011/04/13/found-feminism-tomorrow-when-the-war-began-film-poster-on-the-london-underground/ /2011/04/13/found-feminism-tomorrow-when-the-war-began-film-poster-on-the-london-underground/#comments Wed, 13 Apr 2011 08:00:52 +0000 http://www.badreputation.org.uk/?p=4658 I snapped this one on the tube the other day, after doing a double take to check my eyes were not deceiving me.

Film poster showing mostly women and some men emerging from a burning town

Tomorrow When The War Began

I’m very used to seeing Action Movie Posters – they tend to have muscle men front and centre. If women appear then they have strangely low cut tops and are in that curious pose that only women in posters ever adopt.

You know, the one in which they twist around in order to show their bottoms, chest  and face at the same time. Seriously – click here, here, here and here for some quick examples. Then walk around all day trying to work out when you ever do that pose naturally.

Here’s a man in the same pose. Note massive coat covering everything.

So you can really play Spot The Difference here. On this poster, not only are there more women than men, but they are all dressed pretty much the same. And no-one is wearing ridiculous costumes. Or standing in a funny way.

Yes, the women are all pretty actor types. But then so are the men.

The film itself (wiki article here) is coming out shortly. I had to check what it was about to make sure I wasn’t making some terrible mistake – if so, I’ll have been tricked into promoting a hideous anti-feminist car crash of a film.

Now, the plot is not without its problems, though mostly around the issue of race rather than gender: teenagers fight a guerilla war after their Australian town is invaded by the Asian “Coalition Nations”. This is such a hackneyed big budget trope (attack by foreigners/aliens), and it clashes a bit with the indie flick, Blair Witch-esque documentary feel I got from the trailer.

I remain hopeful (fingers crossed) that, like the poster, the film will do something different.

Found Feminism? See you at the cinema. Let’s discuss over popcorn.

  • Found Feminism: an ongoing series of images, videos, photos, comics, posters or excerpts – anything really, which shows feminist ideas at work in the everyday world. What’s brightened your day? Share it here – send your finds to [email protected]!
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What Does Feminism Look Like? /2011/03/07/what-does-feminism-look-like/ /2011/03/07/what-does-feminism-look-like/#comments Mon, 07 Mar 2011 09:00:39 +0000 http://www.badreputation.org.uk/?p=3877 Image is important. Sad but true. And it is widely held that feminism has an image problem. I thought I’d do some of my famous research into what the internet says feminism looks like.

This is an exciting web 3.0 INTERACTIVE post, rather than one that’s full of pictures, because of copyright licensing laws. When you hear this noise – *ping!* – click the link and hopefully the search results will open in a new window for you to enjoy.

Google Images

*ping!*

Google provide personalized search results of course, so what you see when you Google images of feminism is probably different from what I’m seeing. But what I got is for the most part old favourites, and mostly images created by or appropriated by the feminist movement. I love these pictures. But they are getting kind of old:

Female symbol with fist

Ouch!

  • Rosie the Riveter (what are we going to do when the 1940s aren’t fashionable anymore?)
  • “If I had a hammer… I’d SMASH patriarchy” graphic (a proto-Feminist Hulk? SMASH!)
  • The female symbol with fist – actually a little alarming when you think about why that symbol represents the female.  Punching wombs for equality!
  • Various classic slogans on t-shirts, badges and banners
  • Pictures of Women’s Liberation marches
  • The ‘Look, kitten’ cartoon
  • A painting by Artemisia Gentileschi. It’s ‘Judith beheading Holofernes’, in fact. Bet she was a feminist too – we can’t get enough of violence against men, apparently (more on which later)

In amongst these are the anti-feminist blogger’s illustration of choice, the demotivational poster.

Clipart

*ping!*

These days, some people pretend to be dorky to be cool. I’m the real deal. My major love-in with clipart was at secondary school when I decided to make a school newsletter. No one would do it with me, so I wrote and laid it out and printed it and distributed it in all the classrooms by myself. There was no second issue.

Anyway. Clipart offerings for feminism were pretty thin on the ground, and included:

Those women in red are just the tip of the iceberg in representations of feminism as women fighting / besting / attacking / murdering men, it turns out…

Stock Photos

Famously bizarre friend of the low budget publication producer, there is nothing quite like browsing cheap stock photography websites. There’s even a tumblr dedicated to some of the more outlandish findings.

Let’s start with iStockPhoto.

*ping!*

Yes, that’s right. The first image to come up under ‘feminism’ is a woman holding a gun to her sleeping partner’s head. See also:

Silhouette of a man kneeling down, chained to a giant pink highheeled shoe with a lipsticked, presumably "female" mouth on the side of the shoe's heel. The other end of the chain is held by the shoe-mouth.

This startling picture came up under 'feminism' on free stock photo site www.sxc.hu

 

I find this simultaneously worrying, revealing and hilarious. There we were, slogging away, trying to get recognised as a valid and powerful political movement and to assert our credibility as a critical paradigm, and it turns out all the people creating and using these images are afraid that we’re going to come and BEAT THEM UP.

Other things come up too, but the women-attacking-men theme is pretty striking. One notable exception is this unbelieveable piece of tastelessness: “Sexy woman wearing a Burkha”.

On to Shutterstock, a much friendlier and sexier place, it turns out.

*ping!*

There’s really too great a variety of bizarre representations of feminism here for me to summarise, but highlights include:

The violence against men is present, but it’s more symbolic – women are cutting or stamping on their ties – or implied: the boxing gloves are back, and this enterprising young lady has an assault rifle.

There are also a lot of pictures of attractive models looking like they can’t wait to advertise your new cleanser.

Not that I could ever afford to buy pictures from Getty, but I checked them too.

*ping!*

Popular themes seem to be men and women glaring at each other in offices, arm wrestling and tugs-of-war (also in offices) and another disturbing guns-in-bed picture.

Last stop:

Creative Commons

Firstly: I love Creative Commons; it basically makes my job possible (producing decent communications materials for charities). Y’all should donate to support them.

*ping!*

Flickr is the main place I use for CC pics, and what comes up under ‘feminism’ is on the whole just pictures of the day-to-day business of it. Panel debates, speakers, meetings, marches, placards, some cool graffiti…

Not especially glamorous, but less weird and less violent than what stock photography sites seem to think goes on.  For example, I couldn’t find a single picture of a sexy bride in boxing gloves punching a businessman’s head off.

 

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