1997
DOI: 10.1002/(sici)1097-4571(199708)48:8<718::aid-asi5>3.0.co;2-v
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Information technology and social relations: Portrayals of gender roles in high tech product advertisements

Abstract: Advertisements for technology products were sampled from professional journals in the fields of business, computing science/engineering, and library and information science. Content analyses revealed that men are portrayed in the ads more frequently than women, although the distribution of male and female figures in various poses is more egalitarian in ads found in traditional library journals. The depictions of male and female roles in relation to technology is largely stereotypic. Men are often portrayed as … Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…1 Marketing literature suggests that ad makers generally pursue such a strategy, designing ads so that verbal and nonverbal cues used throughout are consistent (Bartsch, Burnett, Diller, & Rankin-Williams, 2000;Dilevko & Harris, 1997;Misra & Beatty, 1990;Scharrer, Kim, Lin, & Liu, 2006), thus making them more effective. For example, Kanungo and Pang (1973) find that higher evaluations of a product and/or commercial often result when the gender image of a product is consistent with the sex of the presenter; for example, when men introduce (or are featured using) masculine products such as cars and women introduce (or are featured using) feminine products such as sofas.…”
Section: Advertising and Credibilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…1 Marketing literature suggests that ad makers generally pursue such a strategy, designing ads so that verbal and nonverbal cues used throughout are consistent (Bartsch, Burnett, Diller, & Rankin-Williams, 2000;Dilevko & Harris, 1997;Misra & Beatty, 1990;Scharrer, Kim, Lin, & Liu, 2006), thus making them more effective. For example, Kanungo and Pang (1973) find that higher evaluations of a product and/or commercial often result when the gender image of a product is consistent with the sex of the presenter; for example, when men introduce (or are featured using) masculine products such as cars and women introduce (or are featured using) feminine products such as sofas.…”
Section: Advertising and Credibilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As the marketing research discussed earlier suggests, women are generally seen as more credible spokespeople for products that are feminine, and men are generally seen as more credible spokespeople for products that are masculine (Bartsch et al, 2000;Dilevko & Harris, 1997;Kanungo & Pang, 1973;Misra & Beatty, 1990;Scharrer et al, 2006). Thus, gender continuity suggests that women should voice ads about feminine issues and men should voice ads about masculine issues in order to improve message credibility.…”
Section: Issuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The independent judges' ratings were compared with the authors' ratings (e.g., Dilevko and Harris, 1997), and using Holsti's (1969) formula, the inter-rater agreement was 83.6%, indicating a high degree of reliability (Kassarjian, 1977).…”
Section: Neil Granitz and Dana Loewymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…93].) Echoing Brosio, unpacking these popular media images is a "lite" form of transgression and, while amusing, does nothing to challenge the widespread gender discrepancies in images of power, competence, and authority as they relate to technology by librarians and information workersat least one area where these analyses might have some positive effect [68]. Similarly, one can see the image issue vibrating lightly under the surface of the work that urges the field to come up to speed in terms of more avant garde ideas and methods: "'The field has come relatively late to an awareness of qualitative research.…”
Section: Imagementioning
confidence: 99%
“…142-47; 17, pp. [65][66][67][68][69][70][71]. By looking at the mundane (informationally speaking) and analyzing how we construct our practices and invest our artifacts, we construct knowledge from the bottom up, unconcerned with understanding wholes or logical systems but rather "features that help to reverse the traditional strategy of searching for continuities" [16, p. 145; 12].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%