• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Soft Or Abrasive? Gender Stereotypes Reinforced By Music In Toy Commercials

November 6, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Gender stereotypes can be conveyed in ways that go beyond visual and linguistic expressions, new research has shown. It seems that sound and music play a role too, as the music and soundscapes used in toy commercials can influence how children perceive masculinity and femininity.

The advertising industry is extremely powerful when it comes to influencing the shape of new and established ideas, especially those associated with gender. There are multiple reasons for this: gender is easily identifiable, accessible, measurable – and, most importantly, profitable.

Advertisement

In order to define a brand’s “gender”, an advertiser can draw on a range of factors that include the product’s color, shape, texture, packaging, graphics, name, and so on. This type of thinking is particularly obvious in the toy industry, where gender stereotypes are used to make products more appealing to certain groups of children – an approach that has fallen under increased criticism in recent years.

But while much academic research and public scrutiny has focused on the visual factors and language used to shape these stereotypes, less work has explored the role that music plays.

“The role of music in gender representation has been largely ignored, but our findings show that soundtracks are instrumental in shaping gender perceptions from an early age,” the study’s lead author Luca Marinelli, Queen Mary University of London explained in a statement.

Marinelli and colleagues analyzed a large sample of toy commercials that played in the UK and identified clear distinctions between the music styles used for products aimed at boys and girls. For instance, commercials aimed at boys often used louder, more abrasive, and distorted music that reinforced ideas about masculinity through harsher soundscapes. For girls, in contrast, advertisers used softer, more harmonious music that reinforced gentler, traditional ideas associated with femininity.

Advertisement

These synergies are not incidental or a mistake; they deliberately align with established gender norms.

“Gendered music in advertising doesn’t just influence how toys are marketed—it shapes the affective experience of the commercial itself,” senior author of the study Dr Charalampos Saitis, Lecturer in Digital Music Processing at Queen Mary, added.

“Children are receiving these messages on multiple levels, and the emotional impact of the music reinforces the gender binary in subtle but powerful ways.” 

For some time, the UK public has been expressing increased dissatisfaction with advertisers using hackneyed stereotypes for their products. This resistance to gendered advertising has been building to the point where it is forcing the UK’s advertising regulations to evolve to address it.

Advertisement

As such, the findings of this new study conform with the results of the 2019 report from the Fawcett Society that linked the exposure to gender stereotypes (what they refer to as “pink for girls, blue for boys” advertising) with various issues. The issues included body image concerns, limited career aspirations, and a higher male suicide rate.

“The consequences of these early messages are far-reaching,” Marinelli added. “Music in toy commercials is just one piece of the puzzle, but it’s a powerful one.” 

Marinelli and the team viewed the influence of music through their “music-primed gender schemas”, a new psychological framework they introduced that sees music as evoking gendered meanings and expectations. Essentially, these schemas merge aesthetic and gendered meanings that prime listeners to regard certain sounds as more masculine or feminine. In advertising, these schemas can reinforce narrow gender stereotypes which then shape children’s perception of what is “right” for boys and girls.

Adverts, therefore, become “semiotic bombs”, packed with various layers of meaning that blast children with specific messages with sounds, images, and language.

Advertisement

These findings make sense from a historical perspective. Since the 18th century, the harp has often been seen as more closely associated with women than men due to its place in French salons, while drums are stereotypically connected to masculinity due to their role in warfare.

“These associations have become so ingrained in our collective consciousness that we rarely stop to question them,” Marinelli notes. “But they profoundly influence the way we interpret gender roles, even in something as seemingly innocuous as a toy commercial.” 

“Our findings reinforce the need for more comprehensive regulation,” Marinelli argues. “It’s not just about visual and verbal content—regulators must also consider the auditory dimension and how music perpetuates limiting stereotypes.” 

The paper is published in the journal PLOS ONE.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. No ‘magic wand’ to fix Lebanon crisis, new prime minister says
  2. South African union starts indefinite strike, auto industry fears impact
  3. Scorching New 7-Planet System Discovered – And You Can Even Hear Them
  4. Graffiti Found At Pompeii Shows Roman Kids Had An Eye For Violence

Source Link: Soft Or Abrasive? Gender Stereotypes Reinforced By Music In Toy Commercials

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • A Giant Volcano Off The Coast Of Oregon Failed To Erupt On Time. Its New Schedule: 2026
  • Here Are 5 Ways In Which Cancer Treatment Advanced In 2025
  • The First Marine Mammal Driven To Extinction By Humans Disappeared Only 27 Years After Being Discovered
  • The Planet’s Oldest Bee Species Has Become The World’s First Insect To Be Granted Legal Rights
  • Facial Disfiguration: Why Has The Face Been The Target Of Punishment Across Time?
  • The World’s Largest Living Reptile Can “Surf” Over 10 Kilometers To Get Between Islands
  • In 1962, A Geologist Went Into A Cave. 2 Months Later, He’d Accidentally Invented A New Field Of Biology.
  • The Ancient Remains Of A 3-Ton Shark Indicate A New Point Of Origin For Gigantic Lamniform Sharks
  • The Biggest Landslide In Recorded History Happened Quite Recently And Pretty Close To Home
  • Meet The Amami Rabbit, A Goth Bunny That’s Also A Living Fossil
  • The Largest Native Terrestrial Animal In Antarctica Is Both Smaller And Tougher Than You’d Expect
  • The Freaky Reason Why You Should Never Store Tomatoes And Potatoes Together
  • Hominin Vs. Hominid: What’s The Difference?
  • Experimental Alzheimer’s Drug Could Have The Power To Halt Disease Before Symptoms Even Start
  • Al Naslaa: What Made This Enormous Boulder In Saudi Arabia Split In Two? Nobody’s Quite Sure
  • The Amazon Is Entering A “Hypertropical” Climate For The First Time In 10 Million Years
  • What Scientists Saw When They Peered Inside 190-Million-Year-Old Eggs And Recreated Some Of The World’s Oldest Dinosaur Embryos
  • Is 1 Dog Year Really The Same As 7 Human Years?
  • Were Dinosaur Eggs Soft Like A Reptile’s, Or Hard Like A Bird’s?
  • What Causes All The Symptoms Of Long COVID And ME/CFS? The Brainstem Could Be The Key
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2026 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version