Claremont Colleges Scholarship @ Claremont Scripps Senior Theses Scripps Student Scholarship 2016 Beefing Up the Beefcake: Male Objectification, Boy Bands, and the Socialized Female Gaze Dorie Bailey Scripps College Recommended Citation Bailey, Dorie, "Beefing Up the Beefcake: Male Objectification, Boy Bands, and the Socialized Female Gaze" (2016). Scripps Senior Theses. Paper 743. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/scripps_theses/743 This Open Access Senior Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Scripps Student Scholarship at Scholarship @ Claremont. It has been accepted for inclusion in Scripps Senior Theses by an authorized administrator of Scholarship @ Claremont. For more information, please contact
[email protected]. Beefing Up the Beefcake: Male Objectification, Boy Bands, and the Socialized Female Gaze By Dorie Bailey SUBMITTED TO SCRIPPS COLLEGE IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF ARTS Professor T. Kim-Trang Tran Professor Jonathan M. Hall “I enjoy gawking and admiring the architecture of the male form. Sue me. Women have spent centuries living in atmospheres in which female sexual desire was repressed, denied or self-suppressed, and the time has come to salivate over rippled abdominals, pulsing pecs and veiny forearms. Let's do it. Let's enjoy it while it lasts.” --Dodai Stewart, “Hollywood Men: It's No Longer About Your Acting, It's About Your Abs” December 11th, 2015 Bailey 2 Abstract: In the traditionally patriarchal Hollywood industry, the heterosexual man’s “male gaze,” as coined by feminist film theorist Laura Mulvey, is the dominant viewing model for cinematic audiences, leaving little room for a negotiated reading of how visual images are created, presented, and internalized by male and female audiences alike.