Yves Saint Laurent’s (2000) poster
advertisement for Opium perfume, featuring Sophie Dahl, was a failed attempt at
using the physically attractive admirer altercast persuasive technique. As a
result of releasing this campaign worldwide, the advert was banned due to its
explicit content.
Often an attractive person will be seen as
high-status, leading the recipients of the communicative message to admire the
person and therefore wish to be part of their (branded) world. However the
explicit use of sexuality in this advertisement resulted in negative
stereotyping for women, missing the aim of their message.
Pratkanis (2000) performed several studies
demonstrating the effects of correctional adjustments in evaluating
individuals, primarily using gender stereotypes to form his studies. Study 1 in
Pratkanis’ altercasting paper used short resumes of fictitious applicants for
participants to gain a general view of the character, and then resulted in two
questionnaires pertaining to these materials. Participants were split in to
male evaluations (applicant: Mr. Christian Muller) and female evaluations
(applicant: Mrs. Christiane Muller). The second questionnaire in this study
assessed the impression of the applicant in 14 dimensions. It was explicitly
mentioned that the purpose of the study was to find out whether the presented
materials allowed their reader to develop a personal impression of the
application. Then half of the participants were instructed to ensure there was
no gender influence on their judgment, the other half were told nothing. The
figure below depicts their results in a bar-graph format:
Figure 1. depicts results on an index
showing the difference between two critical traits. More positive scores show
higher consistency of judgment with the female stereotype. Individuals with no
correction (instructed to avoid gender stereotypes) show more feminine traits
to be associated with Mrs. Muller than to Mr. Muller. However participants with
corrections showed reverse results, with more female characteristics being
attributed to Mr. Muller, and less to the female fictitious applicant.
The results of this experiment show that
the existing knowledge of a gender stereotype led participants to
over-attribute opposing gender characteristics to avoid stereotyping. In
relation to Yves Saint Laurent’s explicit advertisement, this means that the
advert’s creators have over attributed female stereotypes (on the controversial
topic of women as sexual objects) to the model, causing viewers to rebel against
this view. As the perfume ad is a worldwide campaign it is over-exposed to the
public eye, therefore bringing up issues of objectification and
over-sexualisation, as opposed to a view of high-status beauty as intended.
For an advertisement to be effective in
using the physically attractive admirer altercast, stereotypical imagery needs
to be reduced to a subtle influencer in order to be effective. Pratkanis (2000)
suggests that individuals are more prone to be affected by knowledge they believe
to reflect idiosyncratic aspects of behaviour than normalised characteristics.
As sexuality in mainstream society is still a controversial topic, a rebellion
against this objectifying sexual image is inevitable; as shown by the adverts
removal.
The results of Pratkanis’ (2000) research
suggest that if a stereotype is not established then individuals will not over-attribute
characteristics/expected behaviour to the target. Therefore YSL would benefit
from portraying Sophie Dahl in a more subtle sexual way, playing on her beauty
instead of making her a caricature of the female figure.
Henrietta Esme Bennett
Pratkanis, A. R. (2000). Altercasting as an influence tactic. In D.
J. Terry & M. A. Hogg (Eds.), Attitudes,
behavior, and social context (pp. 201-226). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum
Associates, Inc.
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