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gender protrayal1 Cross cultural study of gender portrayal in children ’ s television commercials: Korea and Hong Kong Young Sook Moon Hanyang University & Kara Chan Hong Kong Baptist University
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gender protrayal2 Stereotypes in children’s advertising is believed to have potential impact on gender socialization, children’s views of themselves and other people Gender role portrayal in advertising is well studied in some western countries cross-cultural variation in gender stereotyping in children advertising was neglected
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gender protrayal3 Many multinationals start to view Asian countries as a single regional market: fast development of communications more flattening of income, education, opportunity to travel and exposure to other cultures Asia is really a series of localized markets with their own characteristics Korea and Hong Kong differ in: history, culture, language advertising rules and regulations
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gender protrayal4 Gender Socialization Several theories to account for gender differences: cultural explanation: established through childhood socialization process structural explanation: arise from common positions in social structures social role theory: men and women behave according to the stereotypes associated with social roles they occupy (a more flexible perspective)
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gender protrayal5 Hofstede’s typology Five cultural dimensions: individualism/collectivism power distance uncertainty avoidance masculinity/femininity long/short term orientation This study focuses on the Masculinity/femininity dimension
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gender protrayal6 Masculinity Index (MAS) Korea Hong Kong 39 57 Feminine Masculine
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gender protrayal7 Research question How does the gender portrayal differ in children ’ s commercials in Korea and Hong Kong? preference for masculine or feminine values in a culture gender differentiation (whether there is sharp distinction between the roles of men and women) Method: Content analysis of TVC
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gender protrayal8 Hypotheses H1: Characters in commercials are more likely to be portrayed in relationships with others in Korea (feminine society) than in Hong Kong (masculine society) H2: Characters are more likely to be portrayed in work situations in Hong Kong than in Korea. H3: There will be more sex-role differences between male and female characters in Hong Kong than in Korea.
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gender protrayal9 Sample N=345, unduplicated Korea: commercials of children’s programming from KBS2, MBC and SBS channels Hong Kong: 40 hours of children’s programming from TVB-Jade and ATV- home channels Public services announcements, station identification and promotional messages were excluded
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gender protrayal10 Two levels of coding Each commercial, code: Product category, product user, sex of voice-over, music, presence of central characters, setting and reward type Each central character (a child, adult, or cartoon human character appears most), up to two CCs, code: Character type, sex, age, role, employment status, activity, and whether he/she is a spokesperson coded by two pairs of trained coders, intercoder reliability ranged from 0.8 to 1
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gender protrayal11 Table 1. Sample profile (N=345) % 37.934.0 19.29.5 15.714.3 9.14.8 7.67.5 7.18.8 1.512.2 2.08.8 Hong Kong (N=147) Korea (N=198) Toys and character toys Education tools and services Medicine and personal goods Others Snack food Drink Fast food Entertainment Chi-square: 32.7; p<0.001 Product category
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gender protrayal12 Product user Korean sample: 12 (6.1%) for male 14 (7.1%) for female 172 (86.9%) for both Hong Kong sample: 15 (10.2%) for male 6 (4.1%) for female 126 (85.7%) for both No significant difference
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gender protrayal13 Voice over Korean sample: 82 (41.4%) use male voice(s) 72 (36.4%) use female voice(s) 16 (8.1%) use male and female voices 28 (14.1%) no voice over Hong Kong sample: 81 (55.1%) use male voice(s) 29 (19.7%) use female voice(s) 9 (6.1%) use male and female voices 28 (19%) no voice over
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gender protrayal14 Central characters Altogether 372 CC coded Korean sample: 109 male CC (48%), 116 female CC (52%) Hong Kong sample: 80 male CC (54%), 67 female CC (46%) No significant difference
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gender protrayal15 Relationship Korean sample: 137 (61%) are in relationship roles, 88 (39%) are in independent roles Hong Kong sample: 90 (61%) are in relationship roles, 57 (39%) are in independent roles No significant difference, H1 rejected
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gender protrayal16 Employment Status Korean sample: 18 (8%) are in working roles, 207 (92%) are in non- working roles Hong Kong sample: 11 (8%) are in working roles, 136 (92%) are in non- working roles No significant difference, H2 rejected
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gender protrayal17 Sex-role difference Korean sample: no significant difference in the roles, recoded roles, employment and sex of spokesperson, significant difference in the activities of CC Hong Kong sample: did not show great sex-role difference between male and female CC H3 rejected
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gender protrayal18 Results of hypotheses testing Hypothesis F- stat. 0.004N.S.No 0.03N.S.No H2: employment status H3: sex role differences H1: relationship Sign. level Supported
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gender protrayal19 Discussion A country’s “gender” failed to predict the gender role portrayals of relationships Possible explanations: the standardization of advertising strategy in the Asian Market heavy use of celebrity endorsement in children’s commercials in Korea women’s issues and rights are more in concern in today’s Korea work roles are seldom featured as children are not familiar with work
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gender protrayal20 Conclusion & Further Research Concept of “gender of nations” needs further examination Application of Hofstede to marketing and advertising research is subject to trial and error The current study can be repeated for adult’s commercials to see if there is any difference
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