Sengupta (2006) conducted a study to compare how White, Black, and East Asian women were portrayed in advertisements in teen magazines. She analyzed two issues from YM and Seventeen and one issue of Fashion 18. The researcher analyzed full-page and multiple-page advertisements featuring at least one woman, totaling 194 images. Content was analyzed for beauty type (e.g., classic/feminine, sexy/sensual), representation type (e.g., East Asian, Back, White), and product type. The models were also coded for their implied social relationships and relative importance in the ad (e.g., major role, minor role). The study proved that race played a role in how ads portrayed models. Black models were usually placed in fashion advertisements, and White models were usually placed in beauty advertisements, which correlates with traditional American ideals and stereotypes that portray White women as the ideal beauty and Black women as having a hypersexual body. East Asian women were found to possibly be starting a new stereotype considering their prominence in technology advertisements.
To be honest, I never quite paid much attention to the race of females in advertisements, but the findings in this study are especially interesting because Black women are often more concerned with beauty (e.g. getting nails and hair done, buying makeup) than body image. Studies show that African American women are disproportionately obese compared to other races in America and are less likely to practice behaviors that would help with weight management, (July, Hawthorne, Eliot, Robinson, 2003). Is it possible that Black women may be subconsciously influenced by the lack of representation in beauty advertisements, and as a result toss the already-achieved body image acceptance aside and strive to be seen as equally as beautiful as their White counterparts?
Naomi Campbell, one of the few top Black models, is depicted in this video discussing her stance on the lack of Black women portrayed as beautiful by the media.
(Idtvdocs, 2009)


