Home Event Reports Feminist Media as an alternative Mainstream Media: Lessons and way forward amid...

Feminist Media as an alternative Mainstream Media: Lessons and way forward amid the pandemic

8
0

Simi Mehta, Anshula Mehta

Media plays a huge role in shaping the perception of ourselves and of the world we inhabit therefore it is of critical importance that we concerned ourselves with media messages and how it impacts our thinking and perspective of the world. Women has been using media to mobile mass campaigns and movements for social justice. They transport their messages through different mediums to disrupt social orders and spin novel social processes.

Feminists have long recognized the importance of self-managed, alternative media and hence increasingly media production is being managed by women. Through new emerging communication technologies, women have started to campaign feminism. 

In a webinar organized by Gender Impact Studies Centre at Impact and Policy Research Institute, Delhi Post News and Gendev Centre for Research and Innovation, Gurugram, Jaspleen Pasricha, Founder, Director and Editor in chief, Feminism in India (FII) highlights the constructive media in which news is influenced by the reporter’s social location and choices are based on certain editorial decisions.

The different mediums use creative language which evoke certain feelings that impacts the way subject is perceived by the public. Thus, being aware of such language can reduce people’s susceptibility to messages and increase their appreciation for the creative process. She also points that media stories are value laden and carries the message regardless of its impact on the public opinions.

Japleen Pasricha_Feminist Media as an Alternative Mainstream Media_ Lessons and the Way Forward amid the Pandemic

She opined that media is created for profits and hence it is important to make sponsors, channels and advertisers accountable for misinformation. It is being observed that certain media houses deliberately spread fake news for Television Rating Point’s (TRP) and they align it with certain political agendas hurting the sentiments of people. Thus, as media consumers its people’s responsibility to cross check and fact check of every news item.

She defines alternative media as anything which is independent, distant, radical, underground, subversive, non-cooperate, progressive, small and falls outside the perspective of main stream media. It differs from established or dominant forms of media. She says, this form of media is booming simultaneously with digital media. It uses a wide spectrum of communication, technologies and formats like Facebook, YouTube or Instagram or media platforms based on newsletters.

Further, Pasricha points out the issues of lack of Indian women and minorities’ representation on the internet, increasing online abuse and gender base violence, online harassment faced by women and minorities often, spreading patriarchal ideas through fake news and misinformation. This stems the need of feminist media. 

She says that the discourse around the scale of gender base violence has been gaining momentum all over the world especially in India, however the problems persists on how the reportage heinousness of crimes such as  rapes, sexual harassment, sexual violence is being carried out in media along with the kind of language used.

She highlighted sppoky headlines are made to invoke horror and shock among people, which are generally insensitive and problematic. The featured images are often insensitive depicting victim’s helplessness and misery throughout her life. The language used, highly blames victims by putting them in bad light ignoring the perpetrator completely. This whole wrong use of speeches influence the thinking of public. Thus, it is important to shift the media focus from victim to perpetuators.

She condemned media for not including women’s perspective in COVID 19 related policy documents, advisories, news coverage, scholarly articles. The women issues have not been covered properly, bringing women at a greater risk of being marginalised with in societies given the global health crisis.

Citing an example to elucidate her point she says accessibility to menstrual products, crisis of disposable pads were completely ignored from media coverage. She further adds that media has been ignorant of sexual health for women especially regarding abortion which is a stigma and a challenge to a safe and confidential abortion services even in regular non-pandemic circumstances.

With the current public health emergency situation where facilities have been repurposed for COVID 19 management, there has been a shortage of abortion services. This shows how COVID has ignored women’s health. She further empahsised the need for telemedicine to support people without exposing staff to viruses/infections in the times of such outbreaks.

“It is important to have alternate forms of media too bring a diversity in the media ecosystem and to hold mainstream media accountable” says Pasricha. Further, alternative media platforms are led by citizen journalism which better report in areas where mainstream media is unable to reach. Thus, alternative media empower citizens and be vocal about their issues. Social media empower alternative media by giving power and autonomy.

“Whether we promote women rights in media or we continue to sell the stories of their sufferings is a hard choice which we have to make”. Says Dr Simi Mehta, CEO & Editorial Director at IMPRI and Fulbright scholar, Ohio State University, USA.

The feminist media industry needs to be encouraged to produce gender-transformative content and to develop self-regulatory equality policies, including access to decision-making positions thereby creating gender equality in content, workplace and management.

Acknowledgements: Nishi Verma is the research program assistant at Impact and Policy Research Institute (IMPRI), New Delhi.

YouTube Video for Feminist Media as an Alternative Mainstream Media: Lessons and the Way Forward amid the COVID-19 Pandemic

Picture Courtesy: Rabble.ca

Previous articleMurky and gendered singlehood: Tales of single women in India
Next articleWork-family spillover: The complex and paradoxical role of women’s work and intimate partner violence
IMPRI, a startup research think tank, is a platform for pro-active, independent, non-partisan and policy-based research. It contributes to debates and deliberations for action-based solutions to a host of strategic issues. IMPRI is committed to democracy, mobilization and community building.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here