The “Macho” Superstructure in Latino Advertisement & Alternative Images
I grew up in a Puerto Rican household, where men
came first, mothers second, boys third, women fourth and the girls, dead
last. Men were to be taken seriously. Boys were expected to
follow and encouraged to act like “little hombres,” not be viewed like clowns.
All the while mothers were to be adored, protected, and once of age, sons were
expected to correct them; daughters came second in just about everything, their
brothers were their keepers. Men could go around and pick up as many
women as they wanted; treat them in any manner they pleased; have no
shame, and still be viewed honorable. But, once a woman
exhibited any similar semblance, she was viewed as a
"whore." Machismo is embedded in the Latino/Latina
psyche. What role has machismo played in advertisement? What
is the relevance of the “Macho Superstructure” and its nexus to Latino advertisement? Machismo is best
described as a strong or exaggerated sense of masculinity stressing attributes
such as aggression, physical courage, virility, and domination of women.
To understand the complexity and inter-relationship of machismo (or its counterpart, "marianismo") and mass media, I find relevance in exploring the positions that they hold in our “Superstructure,” that ideological theory that society consist of two parts: (1) the Base; and (2) the “Superstructure.” The Base is made up of all of us; no one is excluded from the Base. We are either active or passive participants, consuming, working, producing, creating, benefiting or managing aspects of society. We develop relations from this participation that determine other relationships and ideas. The latter form the core of the “Superstructure,” and include culture (norms and mores), institutions (mass media), power hierarchies (machismo), roles (gender stations), rituals (“rites of passage”), and the like. It is the Base, made up of the powerless through the powerful, that determines, conditions and influences the Superstructure, by way of mass media, family, religion, education. The Superstructure reciprocates, maintains and legitimates the Base.
An interesting extension of this concept forms a
major part of Anthony Cortese's narrative in "Constructed
Bodies, Deconstructing Ads: Sexism in Advertisement," which is that
advertisement is the foundation of the mass media. The articles by
Anthony Cortese, Douglas Kellner, Gloria Steinem, and Jean Kilbourne provide
insight and explanation as to how I understand the Superstructure perpetuates
the culture of machismo by legitimizing it as a core value in American-Latino
life aligned with the much larger, Patriarchy. These commentators explain the
various forms in which images are packaged in advertising in mainstream media,
with direct and indirect nuances of sexism and racism and the power
hierarchy, which is just as applicable to machismo Latino-advertisement.
Is machismo Latino-advertisement different
from chauvinism? It is an extension of sexism and discrimination? Does it convey racism? A 1970's advertisement reveals more than the
great taste of Puerto Rican coffee called "Cafe Yaucono," (which I
grew up drinking – No, Cafe Bustelo in our house! - ). Here, you have the
image of women in the kitchen making coffee, preparing it, and placing it on
the table for the male spectator. What is also subtle and indirect is the
placement of two women, both are stationed in their perceived status. The
first is presented as the "kitchen help," while the other, the
lighter-skin woman, is represented as the "lady of the
house," but both appear to "share the same man."
Thus, what I conclude is that the Macho Superstructure at play not only
strengthens and enforces the Patriarchy by conveying the dominant male role,
but also stations the "lady of the house" over the "woman
in the kitchen."
The Latino advertisement market constantly
bombards the community with images that dress the female gender in a way that
is not far from the kitsch of the 1960s, described by Douglas as "flying
nuns, witches, genies, twig-thin models and go-go-boot clad dancers in
cages" (Susan Douglas, "Where the Girls Are, Growing Up Female with
the Mass Media, p 5). Indeed contemporary Latino advertisement portray Latina
women with less and less cloths. Latina women appear to be portrayed with
more mascara, less clothing, "eagerly available" to the male
spectator and presented as a role model for the female viewer. As noted by
Jean Kilbourne, "[f]emales have long been divided into virgins and
whores" (Jean Kilbourne, "The More You Subtract, The More You
Add", p 145).
Calvin Klein / Zoe Saldana
Images from Google).Machismo Latino-advertisement can be
described in words best framed by Cortese as to all advertisement regardless of
community, which is "a pattern of symbolic and institutionalized sexism .
. . [consisting of] . . . any attitude, behavior, institutional
arrangement, or policy that favors one gender over another" (Cortese,
A, "Constructed Bodies, Deconstructing Ads: Sexism in Advertisement,
p 45).
The purpose is twofold: (1) to perpetuate the
Macho (Mamasita) culture: and (2) to convince HER that this is the image HE wants,
HE desires, and having it will bring HER pleasure. At its core, machismo
Latino-advertisement is both chauvinism and reactionary and much like
racism an oppressive ideology.
If there is an alternative to this landscape, it has to begin at the Base (discussed, supra), which will influence the Superstructure and in turn the norms and mores, mass media, and power hierarchies in our society. Educating children from head-start to third grade (formidable years in education) with a focus of de-emphasizing rigid gender roles - which left unaddressed evolve into barriers - is a start. Early education with children, focusing on their behavioral/emotional expressiveness, including verbal and nonverbal, with teaching tools that emphasize gender neutral roles in society as well as social orientation, will influence the Base once these children become active and/or passive participants in society. Young children will develop relations from their participation that ultimately will form the core of the Superstructure, thereby influencing our culture, mass media, the power hierarchies (machismo), and the like. They will become the next consumers, marketers, buyers, users of products, and the images they convey in that process will be influenced by how they see themselves and others. This is not an easy task and for those who are only myopic, unfathomable. But, if one looks at the bigger picture there is room for "mucho" improvement.
Sources:
1. Susan Douglas, "Where
the Girls Are, Growing Up Female with the Mass Media," Random House, 1994, New York, NY,
1994
2. Jean Kilbourne, "The More You Subtract, The More You Add," DEADLY PERSUASION, The Free Press, Simon & Schuster, Inc., 1999
2. Jean Kilbourne, "The More You Subtract, The More You Add," DEADLY PERSUASION, The Free Press, Simon & Schuster, Inc., 1999
3. Anthony Cortese, "Constructed
Bodies, Deconstructing Ads: Sexism in Advertisement," Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 1999
4. Douglas Kellner . Reading Images Critically: Toward a Postmodern Pedagogy, Journal of Education, v170 n3 p31-52 1988
5. Gloria Steinem, "Sex Lies and Advertising," - Ms. Magazine, v 1, July 1990
4. Douglas Kellner . Reading Images Critically: Toward a Postmodern Pedagogy, Journal of Education, v170 n3 p31-52 1988
5. Gloria Steinem, "Sex Lies and Advertising," - Ms. Magazine, v 1, July 1990
I feel that the Spanish and American portrayal of women and gender roles are equally profound. The machismo in Spanish culture is more overtly emphasized and is often in plain view, whereas in the American culture, the patriarchal disposition can be observed by those with eyes to see, but by and large instilled at the base of the subconscious for everyone else.
ReplyDeleteThe concept of the superstructure is spot on, and I couldn't agree more that increasing awareness via early education would not only aid in fixing the problem, but lead a child on the path toward universal appreciation/ understanding, which would go a long way in shaping their future.
-Pablo