Progress is in every decision we make, every technology we invent, every vehicle we build. It’s our past, our future, our reason to exist. Audi of America is...
“this commercial is not exactly feminist”

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Progress is in every decision we make, every technology we invent, every vehicle we build. It’s our past, our future, our reason to exist. Audi of America is...
“this commercial is not exactly feminist”
“Celebrity Feminism” and choice
Professor Anita Brady’s article, “Taking time between g-string changes to educate ourselves,” explores how celebrities have adopted feminism and talks about the disagreement among celebrities. During third-wave feminism, or recent feminism, activists focused on the importance of “choice.” This has led to controversy as whether or not women, especially celebrities, portraying their bodies sexually is liberating or merely self-objectification supported by the music/media industry.
There’s much ado about “choice feminism” lately and some of it surely a bit of healthy autocriticism. If feminism means anything, after all, then it means nothing. “Choice feminism” — the idea that feminism means women can individually choose whatever they wish and consider it an inherently feminist act — is certainly an insidious outgrowth ...
Read Feministing article about choice feminism, which the author, Katherine Cross, calls the “the commodification of empowerment.”
This Vogue advertisement “ caused a lot of back lash a couple years ago. What do you think?
“They talk about empowerment when they are themselves slave to consumerism.”
Read the critique here.
The Society Pages (TSP) is an open-access social science project headquartered in the Department of Sociology at the University of Minnesota
A sociologist perspective on using feminism in advertising.
“Femvertising is a term used to describe mainstream commercial advertising that attempts to promote female empowerment or challenge gender stereotypes.”
Landmark 1994 Wonderbra ad--Is this feminist?
“How is it that women’s arousal has come to be tied so closely to pleasing men?”
Rosalind Gill’s article on Midriff advertising, which “re-sexualizes women’s bodies, with the alibi of a feisty, empowered postfeminist discourse that makes it very difficult to critique.”
Gill, R. (2009). Supersexualize me. Advertising and the ‘Midriffs.” In F. Attwood (Ed.), Mainstreaming sex: The sexualization of Western culture (pp. 93-99).
Read summary here
A$AP Rocky wearing a $700 feminist T-shirt by Dior is hypocritical and problematic, given the A$AP Mob's track record with women.
“the track simultaneously refers to women as bitches.”
What do you think?
Watch his video here
What is Commodity Feminism?
“Commodity Feminism” describes how advertisement for women have adopted feminist language to seemingly invoke female empowerment, yet they are still objectifying women’s bodies and attempting to make a profit. It misuses the concept of female choice on how to present themselves. Women ultimately have to use their bodies as tools for self-expression and freedom. This means women can ultimately use only their bodies to maintain power. They become objects. This article explains how female advertisements capitalize on this by promoting female choice through the ability to gain wealth, beauty, and power through things or commodities (e.g. the company’s products).
read Robert Goldman’s article that coined the term here.