💻 Gender and Electronic Media: Who Controls the Screen?
In today’s hyperconnected world, the screen is everywhere — from phones and laptops to televisions and tablets. And just like cinema, electronic media doesn’t merely reflect reality; it also reshapes it.
The way gender is represented — in news, advertisements, television shows, and social media — quietly influences how people think, talk, and behave.
But as digital spaces evolve, so does the conversation around gender.
📺 From Representation to Reinforcement:
For decades, traditional electronic media — especially television and advertising — reinforced gender stereotypes.
Women were shown as caregivers, homemakers, or beauty icons; men were portrayed as decision-makers, breadwinners, and problem-solvers.
Consider Indian television ads from the 1990s: a woman washing clothes in a detergent commercial, a man giving career advice in a financial ad — both reinforcing “who belongs where.”
Even global media followed similar trends. As media scholar Gaye Tuchman famously observed, this creates a “symbolic annihilation” of women — where they exist on screen, but only within limiting roles.
Yet, times are changing.
🌐 The Rise of Digital Voices:
The arrival of social media and digital content platforms has opened new possibilities.
Women, LGBTQ+ individuals, and marginalized groups are no longer just subjects of stories — they are storytellers.
YouTube, Instagram, and podcasts have become stages for authentic voices.
Creators like Kusha Kapila, Srishti Dixit, and Dolly Singh in India use humor and satire to challenge beauty standards, workplace sexism, and everyday patriarchy.
Globally, digital activists like Emma Watson (with the HeForShe campaign) and Laverne Cox (a trans advocate and actor) use online platforms to blend visibility with advocacy.
Electronic media, once controlled by a few, is now more participatory and democratic — though not free from bias.
📢 Gender and News Media:
Even in the world of journalism, gender balance is improving but still uneven.
Women anchors are more visible on Indian news channels today than ever before, yet studies show they are still underrepresented in leadership roles.
In 2024, initiatives like UN Women’s “Media Compact” began encouraging newsrooms to adopt gender-sensitive reporting and equal representation.
However, sensationalist coverage of gender-based violence in Indian media still often slips into victim-blaming or objectification, showing that ethical progress remains a work in progress.
🎮 New Media, Old Problems:
Electronic media has also expanded into gaming and streaming platforms, where gender representation brings both progress and pitfalls.
Games and web series often reproduce gender clichés — the hypersexualized woman, the violent man, the queer sidekick.
However, creators are beginning to challenge this:
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Web shows like Four More Shots Please! and Made in Heaven explore urban women’s agency and identity.
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Telugu web series such as CommitMental (2020) and Maa Neella Tank (2022) attempt to show nuanced relationships and evolving gender roles.
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Even online gaming now features female-led narratives (Horizon Zero Dawn, Assassin’s Creed: Mirage) that redefine power and heroism.
The shift shows how digital storytelling can question the hierarchies built by earlier forms of electronic media.
🧠 Gender Performativity and Media Power:
According to theorist Judith Butler, gender is something we perform — through repeated actions shaped by culture and media.
Electronic media plays a crucial role in scripting those performances — deciding what’s “masculine” or “feminine,” what’s desirable or deviant.
However, when new creators — especially women and queer voices — reclaim that script through blogs, reels, podcasts, or short films, they disrupt the performance.
The result? A slow but powerful rewriting of gender expectations in public consciousness.
💬 The Double-Edged Screen:
Electronic media is both empowering and exploitative.
While it offers space for gender diversity, it also hosts online abuse, trolling, and digital surveillance, especially targeting women and queer users.
The same internet that amplifies women’s voices also exposes them to harassment — a reminder that access doesn’t always mean equality.
This duality makes media literacy, empathy, and regulation essential parts of gender justice in the digital age.
🌈 The Road Ahead:
Today’s electronic media can no longer hide behind old roles.
Audiences expect representation, respect, and responsibility.
When an ad celebrates a father cooking or a digital series normalizes queer love, that’s not just entertainment — that’s evolution.
As India moves deeper into the age of digital storytelling, every creator, journalist, and viewer becomes a part of the gender conversation.
The challenge is not just to give everyone a screen, but to ensure every screen tells a story worth seeing.
✨ Closing Thought:
Gender and electronic media are inseparable — one shapes the other.
The question is no longer “Who is on screen?” but “Who gets to tell the story?”
And as more voices rise from every corner of the internet, the screen — once a mirror of stereotypes — may finally become a window to equality.
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