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The authors (Levin is a professor of education; Kilbourne, an authority on the effects of advertising) accuse the media of sexualizing children. Constantly, American children are exposed to a barrage of sexual images in television, movies, music and the Internet. They are taught young that buying certain clothes, consuming brand-name soft drinks and owning the right possessions will make them sexy and cool-and being sexy and cool is the most important thing. Young men and women are spoon-fed images that equate sex with violence, paint women as sexually subservient to men and encourage "hooking up" rather than meaningful connections. The result is that kids are having sex younger and with more partners than ever before. Eating disorders and body image issues are common as early as grade school. Levin and Kilbourne stress that there is nothing wrong with a young person's natural sexual awakening, but it is wrong to allow a young person's sexuality to be hijacked by corporations who want them as customers. The authors offer advice on how parents can limit children's exposure to commercialized sex, and how parents can engage kids in constructive, age-appropriate conversation about sex and the media. One need only read the authors' anecdotes to see why this book is relevant. (Sept.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Levin (education, Wheelock Coll.; Remote Control Childhood? Combating the Hazards of Media Culture) and coauthor Kilbourne (Can't Buy My Love: How Advertising Changes the Way We Think and Feel) have cultivated their credentials as experts on media influence and children's development. As the title promises, this book delineates formative social influences promoting premature sexual knowledge and behavior in young children. Among examples of the "new sexualized childhood," the authors emphasize the well-established fact that manufacturers take advantage of children by pushing sexually suggestive products such as Barbie and Bratz dolls, eliciting child sexual behavior. A more useful feature is the sage advice to parents. By emphasizing ongoing discussion and communication between parents and children, this work provides strategies for helping children, particularly adolescents, thread their way through the minefields of societal and peer-reinforced sexuality. Comparable to Susan Linn's Consuming Kids: Protecting Our Children from the Onslaught of Marketing and Advertising, this book is recommended for all public libraries.
—Lynne Maxwell
Introduction: Changing Times, Changing Needs, Changing Responses 3
Chapter 1 Never Too Young to Be Sexy: Living with Children in Today's Sexualized World 15
Chapter 2 From Barbie to Bratz and Beyond: Sexy Sells 30
Chapter 3 Sexual Development Derailed: The Toll on Children 51
Chapter 4 The Toll on Parents, Families, and Schools 72
Chapter 5 Helping Children Through the Minefields: What Parents, Families, and Schools Can Do 90
Chapter 6 Working It Out Together: The Power of Connecting Deeply with Children 116
Chapter 7 The Sexualized Child Enters Adolescence: The Floodgates Open 137
Chapter 8 Helping Teenagers Through the Minefields 164
Chapter 9 Creating a New Cultural Environment 177
Acknowledgments 189
Resources 193
Notes 199
Index 213
Savanahh
Posted March 13, 2010
I was desparate to find something to help me understand and deal with the grossly inappropriate sexually colored behavior and conversations of my elementary-age grandchildren. I found this book in the library and ordered three copies for their parents. It's excellent information and has already had a very positive impact on the children. I've seen a huge change in them just by talking to them about respecting themselves and their own bodies as well as others. My 42-year old son commented that the book has helped him understand his own sexuality and sexual tendancies as he sees the perspective through his own formative years. Thank you, authors, for this important and extremely well-done book. I would make it required reading for every school teacher in the country.
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Posted January 19, 2009
Angeles Arrien (author of The Four-Fold Way) once said, ¿When we lose touch with our inner wisdom, we abnormalize the normal and normalize the abnormal.¿ What was considered crazy, disgusting, or taboo yesterday could become status quo, even necessary, tomorrow¿if we aren¿t paying close attention to our own internal guidance system. But that¿s not so easy to do anymore. Today¿s commercialized culture pushes limits for market share and bombards with mass-delivered influential, often aberrant messages¿making it increasingly difficult for moms and dads to function from their ¿wise selves," as I have discussed in my book, Parenting Well (www.parentingwellinamediaage.com).
An extremely disturbing trend is the counterfeit culture¿s sexualization of children. From early childhood through adolescence today¿s kids are bombarded with negative gender images and skewed messages about sexuality. Twenty years ago, for instance, when I was raising my children, it would have been unheard of, even unspeakable, for manufacturers to market thongs for seven year-old girls. Yet today, crazy as it is, that¿s what¿s happening. So Sexy So Soon provides many other equally distressing examples of how our innocents are now just cogs in the ¿sex sells¿ marketing wheel. The impact is profound. So Sexy So Soon demonstrates the critical urgency of the issue and beautifully articulates what can be done about it by parents and by all of us working together to stop this insidious form of child abuse. (The authors remind us that the thong is the stripper¿s clothing of choice, in case we have forgotten.)
Diane Levin (www.dianeelevin.com) is professor of education at Wheelock College and has been involved in training early childhood professionals for more than twenty-five years. She has worked extensively in the field of media-related issues, and is an internationally recognized expert on the effects of violence, media, and commercial culture on children, and speaks often on these subjects. She is the author or co-author of seven books including Remote Control Childhood? and The War Play Dilemma. Jean Kilbourne (www.jeankilbourne.com), a Senior Scholar at the Wellesley Centers for Women is internationally recognized for her pioneering work on the image of women in advertising. A popular lecturer, The New York Times Magazine named her one of the three most popular speakers on college campuses. She has produced award-winning films, including the Killing Us Softly series and is the author of Can¿t Buy My Love: How Advertising Changes the Way We Think and Feel.
Either one of these remarkable women could have alone written So Sexy So Soon. I¿m glad they decided to team up, instead. The combined wealth of each of their backgrounds and expertise bring a rich tapestry of ideas, examples, and suggestions. The ultimate power of the book is their compelling united voice¿not only as professionals pioneering this work, but also as mothers. By sharing parenting examples of their own fears, questions, and successes, they give us hope.
By admitting that this is a complex issue with no quick fixes and by giving practical ¿how tos¿ the authors provide both a thoughtful analysis of the problem as well as an effective action plan. Not much time? Go straight to Chapter 6 for dialogues demonstrating listening deeply and asking key questions to support children's healthy sexuality in a commercial culture.
Anonymous
Posted January 14, 2011
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Anonymous
Posted October 24, 2011
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Anonymous
Posted August 2, 2009
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Overview
Thong panties, padded bras, and risqué Halloween costumes for young girls. T-shirts that boast “Chick Magnet” for toddler boys. Sexy content on almost every television channel, as well as in books, movies, video games, and even cartoons. Hot young female pop stars wearing provocative clothing and dancing suggestively while singing songs with sexual and sometimes violent lyrics. These products are marketed aggressively to our children; these stars are held up for our young daughters to emulate–and for our sons to see as objects of desire.Popular culture and technology inundate our children with an onslaught of mixed messages at earlier ages than ever ...