Domestic violence and the media

BY Rema Nilkantan| IN Media Practice | 22/04/2002
Domestic violence and the media

Domestic violence and the media

 

Day after day, the various channels churn out serials with doses of violence against women. While some portray subtle cases of abuse and violence, some others are alarmingly loud

 

Day after day, the various channels churn out serials with doses of violence against women. While some portray subtle cases of abuse and violence, some others are alarmingly loud.

The International Women`s Day on the 8th of March and the Protection from Domestic Violence Bill, 2001 has been able to garner the much-needed attention on domestic violence.

In this context, I would like to emphasise the role of media, especially the television media in spreading domestic violence, albeit unknowingly. It is now well acknowledged that the reach of television media in the country is enormous. Day after day, the various channels churn out serials with doses of violence against women. While some portray subtle cases of abuse and violence against women, some others are alarmingly loud. Popular serials that command high viewership, at one point or the other, depict women as being falsely implicated by the members of the family and being sent away to mental asylum.

Mental illness and amnesia are the main two tools available with television content makers to inflict women with. When a woman starts to assert herself, she finds herself branded as a mentally unstable person. Poignant cases of such portrayal were `Vazhkai` and `Kaveri`, (Sun TV), both currently off air. The protagonist of Kaveri, who takes the same name, enacted by Madhu of Roja fame finds herself lodged in the mental hospital when she tries to raise her voice against the miscreants who want to dislodge her and her family from the house they shared some of the beautiful moments of life. A principal character in Vazhkai also meets with the same fate. The ever affable and loving bahu of `Kyunki Saans Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi`, Tulsi finds herself in the thick of events and succumbs to amnesia.

If ratings are any indication of popularity, audiences should do rethinking on the kind of stuff that is being made popular. The immensely popular `Kyunki…` witnessed one of the most dramatic resurrections of any character in modern times! The dead character in Mihir had a rebirth, owing to popular demand.

One popular serial, currently on air in a popular vernacular channel during prime time shows women being violated at varying degrees, physical, mental and sexual by the protagonist. The hero is depicted as taking revenge on the women of a family, which was responsible for abusing him as a child (Aaligal, Sun TV, 9 pm, Monday through Friday). The serial though well made, such depiction can prove to be highly dangerous, when it is available to thousands of audiences who are illiterate through the television, at almost no cost at all.

Such is the amount of following that it should not come as a surprise to find women themselves approving of such male characters. One educated female friend once remarked that it would be acceptable to her if her husband beat her up once in a while. Her reasoning was that husbands would beat up wives only if they were strongly possessive of them, which was an indication of their love and