Abstract:
Women and men have attraction for very fair color in Bangladeshi context. Every
man wants to have his fiancé or wife to be very fair. On the other hand, girls want to
marry a man who is very fair in complexion. For this reason skin whitening products
earning huge profit in Bangladesh also suggests that fair skin means superiority and
beauty. Skin whitening advertisements show fair skin is a necessity for success, and
promote the use of their product to achieve the ideal face, partner, and desired
behavior from the society and attention from the opposite sex. Most of the fairness
creams are targeted to the young female population of the society and men are the
new customers of the beauty industries besides women since men have become very
conscious of their looks and lots of men buy such creams to look fairer. There are lots
of beauty parlors for men which promise men that they will make them look fairer
and lots of men spend huge amount of money to go to such parlors. The main purpose
of this study is to raise awareness, so the consumers do not get influenced by the use
of language/persuasive discourse in advertisements before buying any kind of fairness
products. In order to do this, this study addressed two central research questions: how
fairness-product ads influence the target people? and what is the impact of such ads?
However, this study looks at how advertisements (TVCs and print ads) of fairness
products for women and men persuade and manipulate common people in the
Bangladeshi context, from a CDA perspective. In this Study the collected data were
two types: advertisements (TVCs and print ads) and interviews (experts and common
people). The data was analyzed according to Fairclough’s (2005) three dimensional
approach of discourse analysis, and discussed in terms of discourse, ideology and
power.
In Bangladesh the concept of beauty is associated with fair complexion. The findings
suggest that texts influence the consumers through their artificial and catchy language.
The ad maker uses various colors in the ads. Ad makers of fairness ads use various
light colors like pink, white, yellow, light green, orange, and so on in the ads to attract
the attention of the consumers. TVCs of fairness products for men and women claim
to change skin color of consumers from black to white and thus their fate will be
changed and they will achieve successes at every stage of their life. The TVCs of
fairness products promote the idea that fairness is equivalent to beauty, love and
success. In our country being dark is seen as the source of many social problems,
from the birth till marriage. Fairness ads state that fairness creams will make one
white or fair within few days. The respondents of the study expressed that it is
impossible to change dark skin color to white with the use of a cream. Most of the
expert of the study also expressed that continuous use of the fairness cream made their
face skin look fresh, but not white. Most of these fairness creams are non-prescribed
products, and regular usage of skin fairness products has side effects for the face skin.
They also expressed that the ads capture the market by their models and language; it
is a kind of business policy to sell the products. Even the models who are performing
in these ads, may have limited idea about the products, and may not use the products
themselves, the consumers do not get influenced by the use of language/persuasive
discourse in advertisements before buying any kind of fairness products.
Description:
This thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MA in English Language and Literature of East West University, Dhaka, Bangladesh.