To answer the first point, it's because women are valued first (and occasionally only) as sex objects while the last thing that men are valued for is their status as such. I don't think that there's a grand advantage to the male position given the impact it has on self esteem, but I have my suspicions that it beats being female. More over, it's an -inequality-. I wish it wasn't the case, but hey.Abandon4093 said:That's an issue that stems purely from our societies labelling of things.
Whether the intent is there not isn't the issue. How is that a woman showing skin is detrimental to their sexes image, but a man walking around in what amounts to underwear and a cape is the height of masculinity?
How is Catwoman over sexualised and Batman is not?
If you remove the cape there really isn't all that much of a difference in the way the costume fits the character.
More or less everyone in comics etc are sexualised to the point of ridiculousness. That's kind of the point in them. Whether we like to admit that or not.
Catwoman is sexualised in her behaviour as much as her outfit. How many BDSM cliches are there in that character after all? Batman is not characterised sexually in the way he behaves. If you took all the male/masculine characters and all the female/feminine characters, the latter would contain much more sexual imagery, allusion and pandering than the former.
T&A sell after all.
Personally, I'd like to see more sexy men around. Would be nice.