Susan Bordo Susan Bordo is the author of 'Ad hunger as ideology' talking about advertising and ways to present men and women's food in various ways. Whether it is eating it, cooking, body shape and size. Bordo's ideology is that advertisers use women's anxiety to allow women to eat and eat alone while men consume a lot of food. The real problem here is whether Bordeaux ideology will hinder advertising. Advertisers who promise "slimming" and "control" behind the various advertising Mirage hide the meaning of attracting female customers.
When considering these images, please read the excerpt of Susan Bordo's book "Male body", where Bordo thinks of rethinking the body of men with modern advertisements from Calvin Klein and a company like Gucci I will. For Calvin Klein ads, please see another page. February 23: In this course, it is impossible to systematically study gender in Western culture and art. So, I would like to greatly improve our work from the art of ancient Greece until the beginning of the 15th century. What I would like to consider is a calendar illustration of Torres' wealth, a prayer book for the French family royal family Jean de Berry. When the Duke died in 1416, the manuscript was not completed. Illustration studies show how it became a good bridge between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.
Susan Bordo is Otis A. Singletary Humanities of Humanities, University of Kentucky. She is also a philosopher dealing with many traditional aspects of philosophy like Descartes and Sigmund Freud. However, Bordo is different from most other philosophers in research and training on 'popular culture and physical expression'. Not only did she write a philosopher, Plato, she also wrote about Madonna and O. J (Bordo 138). Most of Bordo's work as a teacher involves expressing the body of women in marketing and advertising. She believes that the majority of the past and present increase gender identity and believe that "... the expression of a woman's body is truth" or "real", "natural" or "ordinary" (Bordo 138-39 ).
Feminist philosopher Susan Bordo regret the obsession of western media for thinness and diet of women. Her basic complaint is that more and more women around the world are considered obese and need to take diet. Bordo cited the Fiji Islands as an example. "These islands did not report cases of eating disorders until the appearance of television in 1995. In 1998, programs in the United States and Britain began broadcasting there three years later, a diet report (149-50) Bordo's point of view is that Western diet worship spreads even to the remote areas of the world, after all, Bordo says that diet culture will find you no matter where you live Bordo 's view is correct to me, now I think it, many women I know are concerned about their weight, no matter where they come from. .