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Review
Girls on Display
Why females younger and younger are being portrayed as sexual objects.



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The Lolita Effect: The Media Sexualization of Young Girls and What We Can Do About It
M. Gigi Durham
Overlook Hardcover, 2008
320 pp., $16.47

This spring, Disney pop star Miley Cyrus became the center of a media backlash when Vanity Fair released photos of the Hannah Montana lead in nothing more than a sheet. While the magazine is known for pushing boundaries of propriety, these images were particularly troubling due to the age of the star (15) and those who emulate her (girls as young as 8). The images illuminated the way children younger and younger are becoming players in a sexual culture traditionally reserved for adults.

How did children come to be seen as sexually available as adults? M. Gigi Durham contends in The Lolita Effect: The Media Sexualization of Young Girls and What We Can Do About It (4 stars) that the sexualization of children, especially young girls, is largely perpetuated by print and electronic media. Durham's title evokes Vladimir Nabokov's 1955 Lolita, a modern classic about a French scholar who falls in love with a 12-year-old. What does the Lolita Effect look like today? "Adult sexual motifs are overlapping with childhood—specifically girlhood, shaping an environment in which young girls are increasingly seen as valid participants in a public culture of sex." Durham, a University of Iowa communications professor, argues that the Lolita Effect harbors a special interest in those less discerning about sexual boundaries.

Durham offers an arsenal of statistics and examples to demonstrate that drawing young girls into sexual culture is, in part, a backlash against feminism. As adult women gain more influence in the public square, girls—naïve and easily manipulated—become a more appealing image of female sexuality for a media culture that has enshrined "sex sells" as its motto.

Durham explains that the Lolita Effect thrives because of five widespread cultural assumptions: that sexuality is (1) for public display; (2) defined by a narrow or nonexistent ideal; (3) the property of youth; (4) more exciting if it is violent; and (5) about male dominance over females. Most of the book challenges these assumptions and develops strategies to help girls and their parents resist the Lolita Effect.

One weakness of Durham's book is its lack of a vision for what it means to be human, and thus, for what sexuality is about. For Christians, the place to begin speaking about human sexuality is the doctrine of Creation. All human beings are made in God's image, a personal image that should not be objectified or sexualized in order to sell products. As new creations in Christ, our identity is defined by our presence in his body, the church. Baptism, the Lord's Supper, and Scripture teach us what it means to be human and how that shapes our understanding of sexuality.

We were not created to languish as fallen consumers of sexualized images, but to be part of a body offering praise and honor to God. Read alongside classic Christian texts on sexuality, The Lolita Effect becomes a powerful tool for those wanting to challenge the objectification of the vulnerable among us.

Todd C. Ream and Sara C. Ream, parents of two daughters in Greentown, Indiana. Todd is the associate director of the John Wesley Honors College at Indiana Wesleyan University, and Sara is the co-coordinator of Marion, Indiana's Mothers of Preschoolers.



Related Elsewhere:

The Lolita Effect: The Media Sexualization of Young Girls and What We Can Do About It is available on Amazon.

Previous articles on sexuality and gender are available on our site.





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[Reader Reviews]
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Displaying 1 - 3 of 15 comments.See all comments
Roberto   Posted: September 24, 2008 9:39 AM
Let's leave Nabokov out of it. Whatever the term "Lolita" has come to symbolize, it is completely unrelated to the book from which the term originates or the author thereof. The central cause of the sexualization of young girls is the sexualization of our culture, which has little to do with sex itself, but with the substitution of other cultural signifiers with the sexulaized or the replacement of transcendence with the sexual. In an age when transcendence has been denied and/or replaced with the immediacy of a consumer culture, sex is the last signifier of transcendence. The worst of it is that Christians, and Evangelicals more than any other, have bought in to the consumer culture hook, line and sinker. Just look at the smorgasborg of consumer options on display within the Evangelical, consumer friendly subculture that has replaced the genuine biblical faith inagurated by Jesus. Whatever it is, that which passes for the "church" in America, it is not what we seen in the NT text.

Jim B   Posted: September 23, 2008 8:34 PM
The sexualization of children is just the most offensive aspect of the general elimimation of childhood as a social concept. Childhood is a concept that arose in concert with the spread of literacy and mandatory schooling, starting about 100 years after the invention of movable type printing. As our culture becomes less print based and more image based, the ideas and information previously only accessible to those who through time and training were able to read about such things are now accessible to anyone able to sit in front of a television or computer screen. It is a direct result of a technological shift in how we as a society communicate. As Neil Postman said so well, "A society that cannot keep secrets cannot sustain the ideal of childhood". We can't turn back the clock, but we can take steps to monitor, limit, and filter the media our children are exposed to. It often seems like a losing battle with the ubiquitous nature of mass media, but we have to at least try.

Glenn   Posted: September 24, 2008 12:44 AM
As a father of a teenager, I have been horrified by how young pop stars are oversexualizing everything they do, turning what we once accepted as "bubble gum" pop into the same trash performed by their adult peers. The lyrics have gotten more explicit about sex, the dances and clothes have gotten more sexualized, and the lifestyles of these children has gone too far. Disney has churned out quite a few now-"fallen" teen stars, and yet they don't seem to react with anything more than "Time for another Lohan!" Truly, this tide must be stemmed, or our daughters will be washed away. As for whether the title was a good idea: Let's face it, the girls wouldn't act that way if the boys and men didn't like it. Nabokov's "Lolita" is a perfect reference. I applaud any effort to not only diagnose the problem but also to address solutions for parents. I think that the education needs to happen not only with our girls but in teaching our BOYS proper respect for girls and for sexuality.

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