I have had the page three debate
rolling around in my head for a while now.
What made me want to write about it today was the glamour model that
appeared in Celebrity Big Brother and the comments that I saw about her. The particular comment that made me sad was
that her parents would be ashamed of her, because of her profession. It just strikes me as being very small
minded.
The campaign is based upon the twofold reasons of both objectifying women and also been a bad influence on children.
Firstly, you say that having a topless
woman on page three is causing men to continue to objectify women. The page is torn out; pull on a wall; “used”;
etc. But naked women are not only found
on page three. They are found in fashion
magazines, everywhere. The only
difference is that it is labelled as art and is therefore fine. The page can still be torn out and used
however the buyer of the magazine wants to.
Not to be crass, but men like
naked women and whether that nakedness is in a newspaper or magazine makes not
a jolt of difference.
People also complain that
children could be subjected to these images.
I grew up with seeing page three photographs and they did not scar me in
any way. Your son is not going to grow
up to be a rapist because he saw a pair of breasts in a newspaper.
Magazines, just like newspapers
are frequently left in trains, buses, park benches. So yes a child could be passing, pick up the
newspaper, turn to page three and see a pair of breasts. But they could similarly open a fashion
magazine and see a woman entirely naked, albeit strategically posed.
How do you explain differently
the reasons behind each? Six year old
Danny looks at two images and says “Look Mummy, those ladies aren’t wearing any
clothes”. Do you respond that one image
is right and one is wrong? Why is the
topless photograph wrong? I would
suggest that telling your child that looking at a naked image is wrong is far more harmful in the long run than the images.
They are just pictures. We are born naked and there is nothing wrong
with the naked image. You can choose to
objectify an image or not.
H&M recently launched a new
underwear campaign with David Beckham in his pants. Did I stare?
Yes of course I did. Did I think
wow he looks damn hot? Yes I did. For those moments he was a body I was looking
at and that was the point of the ad. He
had sold his image in order to sell underwear.
Did I judge him? No.
Did I think that he was less of a person for selling those images? No.
Now the question I ask is how is
that different to a woman who sells her image to page three? She is selling her image of her own free
will in order to sell newspapers for her employer. Is she being exploited? No. It
is her chosen profession. Who is anyone
to judge her for that?
In a world where women’s rights
to their own bodies are being ever more restricted, in a country where female
genital mutilation is being carried out right under our noses, in a time where sex workers are stigmatized rather than
helped and protected against violence, isn’t it time that the feminist movement
worried about something more than just a pair of breasts?