Many of us have signed the No
More Page 3 petition asking the editor of The Sun to stop running topless pictures on page 3. The petition has caught the national
imagination, and garnered some high-profile supporters along the way, yet still
the topless images appear.
However,
things may be changing. There was no picture of a topless model last Friday or on Monday although she
was back later in the week for the usual "check 'em Tuesday" but
perhaps the paper is weaning itself off topless girls.
On Wednesday Rupert Murdoch, the Sun’s
publisher, took to Twitter to say that he considered page 3 to be “old
fashioned” and added "Aren't beautiful young women more attractive in at least
some fashionable clothes?”. He asked his
followers for their opinion and the majority agreed that it was time to axe the
nude models.
Murdoch also tweeted "Brit feminists bang on forever about
page 3. I bet never buy paper." However, whether or not we buy his
paper we are all affected by the fact that it routinely features a topless
woman. It’s helping to create our highly sexualised culture which is damaging. The Home Office Report on Child Sexualisation
of 2010 found that 'there is a clear link between consumption of sexualised
images, a tendency to view women as objects and the acceptance of aggressive
attitudes and behaviour as the norm'.
The Sun is exacerbating many issues faced
by young people in portraying young girls with big breasts as both normal and
the ideal. This is illustrated in a
report published this summer which found that concerns over body image is
making girls in England among the unhappiest in the world. The study,
published by the Children’s Society, found that despite having some of the
highest living standards, children in England
ranked ninth in happiness, behind Romania,
Brazil and Algeria and only ahead of South Korea and Uganda.
One in five adolescent English girls and
one in nine adolescent English boys said they had body image concerns.
One 12-year-old told researchers "People are judged on looks. Sometimes
you feel like you can’t enjoy yourself unless you are pretty."
And neither is this a problem confined to children;
when our Director spoke about this on a BBC local radio station recently the
presenter, a man in his 40s, spoke of his struggles with the issue.
The written word is losing out to images
as the most powerful means of communication.
as the most powerful means of communication.
Last week members of GirlGuiding wrote an
open letter to the party leaders calling for action to protect them from the
sexualised images which surround them every day and which are difficult to
ignore. Three quarters of Guides think
that there are too many pictures of naked women in the media and they would
like to see a ban on harmful sexualised content in mainstream media and school
lessons in body confidence.
Rupert Murdoch may say that those of us who
do not buy his paper have no right to an opinion on its contents but he is
wrong. Shockingly 7 out of 10 Girl
Guides aged over 13 say that they have experienced sexual harassment. This is the real impact of the daily diet of
titillation.
It's clear you have appropriated feminist language to make your campaign seem about women's rights and not morality. Well done.
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