{"exhibit":{"title":"Sexuality, Race, and Ethnicity in American Advertising","description":"<p class=\"p1\"><span class=\"s1\">Advertising imagery has usually depicted sexuality as heteronormative.\u00a0<\/span><span class=\"s1\">It is a fair generalization to say that advertising imagery, in nearly every case, tends to follow and mimic social and cultural changes rather than to initiate them.\u00a0<\/span><span class=\"s1\">Depictions of alternative sexualities in advertising thus began only after LGBT people came out in American society and media programming, most notably TV sitcoms, included first gay and later lesbian characters.<\/span><\/p>","credits":"William M. O\u2019Barr, Duke University","featured":0,"public":1,"theme":"","theme_options":null,"slug":"sexuality--race--and-ethnicity","added":"2018-02-20 17:09:41","modified":"2018-04-02 17:17:57","owner_id":2,"use_summary_page":1,"cover_image_file_id":null,"id":6},"item":{"item_type_id":18,"collection_id":5,"featured":0,"public":1,"added":"2018-01-29 19:51:38","modified":"2018-03-14 17:56:57","owner_id":1,"id":1321}}