Sexist and impossible standards are still entrenched in UK political reporting, new study finds聽
Female politicians continue to be subjected to sexist, impossible standards at the hands of the UK media, according to a new study conducted by the 扣扣传媒.
The study analysed more than 115 UK mainstream tabloid and broadsheet articles published directly after the resignation of former Prime Minister, Theresa May in May 2019. The research found a dominant theme in the assessment of May鈥檚 legacy was her perceived inability to 鈥榞et Brexit done鈥.
A large proportion of the coverage framed May as politically and personally fragile despite her 22 years in Parliament. The study argues that this framing was rooted in sexist beliefs that associate femininity in politics with weakness.
Dr Nathalie Weidhase, author of the study and Lecturer in Media Communication at the 扣扣传媒 said:
鈥淲e found language that strongly suggested that the 鈥榝eminine weakness鈥 is the opposite of the 鈥榤asculine strength鈥 that is deemed necessary to 鈥榞et Brexit done鈥. Thus, Brexit has been constructed as inherently masculine, and women are considered a threat to this project, highlighting Brexit as a gendered political process.
鈥淯nfortunately, in the eyes of the media, female qualities, and women themselves, can only stand in the way of the success of Brexit as an inherently male political populist project.鈥
As an example of the sexism female politicians are subjected to, the study shows how newspapers highlighted May鈥檚 tears as an extraordinary act for a politician, but also as proof that Theresa May did possess some feminine emotions. This unexpected display of emotions was met with sympathy across the political spectrum. However, it also revealed a range of tensions throughout the British media landscape along political and gendered lines.
Dr Weidhase commented further:
鈥淓motional performances come at a cost for women. They may make female political leaders more likeable, but in turn they lose credibility and are judged as less competent 鈥 trapping them in a double bind that suggests that the assertiveness required for leadership is incompatible with the qualities associated with femininity, such as empathy.
鈥淔emale politicians are mediated as women first, politicians second, but are simultaneously meant to represent other women politically 鈥 an additional burden in itself. In the context of social media, this intensifies in violent ways with female politicians being regularly subjected to torrents of sexist abuse.鈥
Read the鈥痜ull study in .
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