GENDERIZATION OF SCENTS
Originally perfumery products were used to deodorize the body and protect from certain diseases which were believed to be caused due to foul smell. Now perfumes have become markers of sexuality, class and wealth distinctions.
The
marketing of perfumes is highly gendered and has led to creation of distinction
between ‘masculine’ and ‘feminine’ scents. Such marketing shapes cultural
perceptions and leads our nose and brain to unconsciously make distinctions
between perfumes for men and those for women. Scents containing flowery and
fruity notes are identified as ‘female scents’ while those containing woody,
leathery, musky notes are identified as ‘male scents’.
This
genderization of scents and smells and its cultural practices are best
displayed through marketing and advertisements. Perfume shops have separate ‘men’
and ‘women’ sections. The product names are carefully chosen to represent
gendered categories. The bottles of ‘male perfumes’ have strong and rugged looks
giving a sense of masculinity whereas the bottles of ‘female perfumes’ are curvy
stressing feminine sensuality. The packaging of ‘male perfumes’ contains dark
colors whereas those of ‘female perfumes’ contains colors like pink, red, lavender,
etc.
Advertisements
can seep into unconscious thinking of people leading them to believe certain
notions such as - perfumes deliver femininity and cologne delivers masculinity.
Advertisements of ‘male perfumes’ depict a man wearing a certain perfume being
to attract unknown women like a magnet and can getting them to literally cling
onto him. Recent advertisements show a woman being attracted to man, but is informed
by her friend that he does not use perfume, leading her to lose interest in the
person. The advertisement ends with a question “kahin vo insaan aap toh nahi?” It
is clear from that such advertisements are trying to market perfumes as objects
for fulfilment of lust.
Stereotyping
and objectification of women in advertisements leads to weighing their worth
only in terms of physical appearance by audiences who might become consumers of
such products. Sexuality and femininity being represented through products used
for fragrance generally depicts women in an extremely sensual way that it
creates the parameters of what ‘ideal’ femininity should be.
The
deep-rooted patriarchal structures are also visible in these advertisements
where it has been shown that men going out on field doing hard work which marks
him an earning member of the house is allowed to smell sweaty and ‘woodsy’ which
would in fact increase his sex appeal, but a working woman must not give a
whiff of her sweat away as she is symbol of poise and sensuality which demands
her to have fragrance that will appeal her partner when he’s back from his work
conveniently overlooking the fact that she’s been working all day long too.
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