Wednesday, 16 November 2016

CoP Essay

Jansson-Boyd, C. (2010) Consumer psychology. New York: McGraw Hill Education.
  • 'Many studies have found that both women and men do not believe that their current body form is attractive... Research has repeatedly found that physically attractive individuals are perceived by most to be socially more desirable than those that are perceived as being unattractive, something that is likely to have been reinforced by consumer societies...'

Key terms: Gender, body image, gender and advertising, gender and the media, gender representation, gender and branding, gender and consumer society

Researching Texts...

-------Body Image by Sarah Grogan

The basis of body shape ideals:
Western culture shows a preference for slenderness

Christian Crandall and Rebecca Martinez Study (1996) evaluated Mexican and American students' beliefs on being overweight, America being the most individualistic culture while Mexico was the 32nd. They deemed it to be less in our control to stop weight gain, the study showed the more individualistic a country is, the more we blame individuals for their life outcomes including these anti-fat attitudes.  

"Within Western ideology being overweight is perceived to violate the cultural ideal of self-denial and self-control"

"Biologists and some psychologists have suggested that these body shape preferences derive from biology. They argue that these ideals are based on the fact that slenderness is more healthy than overweight. On the other hand, theorists who have looked at cultural differences in body shape preferences at different times and in different cultures have tended to suggest that biology plays a minor role in the idealisation of slenderness, and that it is largely learned." 

Fashion/ Advertisement: 

"The idealisation of slimness in women is a very recent phenomenon, dating from the 1920s. It is often argued that the thin ideal is the outcome of successful marketing by the fashion industry, which has become the standard of cultural beauty in the industrialised affluent societies of the twentieth century (Gordon R 1990)." pg 14

"Clothes fashions were represented by hand drawn represented by hand drawn illustrations until the 1920s, where they started to be photographed and widely distributed in mass-market fashion magazines. These magazines presented a fantasy image of how women should look. The fashions themselves demanded a moulding of the female body, because each 'look' suited a particular body shape (Orbach 1993)." pg 14

"They [the fashion industry] wanted models that looked like junkies. The more skinny and f-ed up you look, the more everyone thinks you're fabulous. (Schoemer 1996: 51)" pg 16

Men 

"The naked, muscular male body which represented this aesthetic ideal can also be seen in the work of High Renaissance painters, such as Michelangelo's The Battle of Cascina, painted in 1504. (Plate 9, p88)" pg 17

"Another notable exception to this general trend is the idealisation of the male body in Nazi propaganda of the Second World War... This ideal (highly muscled, engaged in athletic pursuits) is echoed in images in the specialist body- building magazines that emerged in Europe in the 1940s (Ewing, 1995)." pg 17

Media Effects

"Silverstein et al (1986) found that, in thirty-three television shows, 69 percent of female characters were coded as 'thin', compared to only 18 percent of male characters." pg 94

"...present day women who look at the major mass media are exposed to a standard of bodily attractiveness that is slimmer than that presented for men and that is less curvaceous than that presented for women since the 1930s. (Silverstein et al., 1986: 531)" page 95

Social Comparison Theory Leon Festinger 1954
"We desire accurate, objective evaluations of our abilities and attitudes. When unable to evaluate ourselves directly, we seek to satisfy this need for self evaluation through comparisons with other people. Unfavourable comparisons (where the other is judged to score higher in the target attribute than oneself) are known as upward comparisons. Favourable comparisons (where the other is judged lower on the target attribute) are known as downward comparisons. This social comparison process may be unconscious, and is outside volitional control (Miller, 1984)." pg 100 

Self Schema Theory Markus's 1977 
"A self schema is a person's mental representation of elements that make him/her distinctive from others; those aspects that constitute a sense of 'me'. According to Markus, people develop their sense of self through reflecting on their own behaviours, from observing reactions of others to the self, and through processing social information about which aspects of the self are most valued."
"Philip Myers and Frank Biocca (1992) have adopted Markus's (1977) Self Scehma Theory, and adapted it to explain the effects of social pressures on body image... Myers and Biocca see a person's body image as one aspect of the mental representation that constitutes the 'self'. As with other aspects of the self, the body image is a mental construction not an objective evaluation. Hence it being open to change through new information... believe that body image is 'elastic' in that it is unstable and responsive to social cues." pg 101

Children
"They argue that children 'consume' adult beliefs, values and prejudices around body shape and size, and adopt them as their own."

Grogan and Wainwright, 1996
Interviewing eight year old girls 
What do you worry about then?
"Being fat mostly"
"Being fat"
They agreed they wanted to be thin both now and when they grow up.


Text 2 
------- The Media and Body Image: If Looks Could Kill by Maggie Wykes, Barrie Gunter (2005)

Self starving and body image

"In 1994 research in Australia amongst school girls found that '16 percent of the pre-pubertal girls and 40 per cent of the girls who had passed their menarche perceived themselves as too fat'. (Abraham and Llewellen Jones 1997) In the United States some estimates report that 20 per cent of young college females self starve (Pyle et al., 1990)

"Although primarily a disease of the Western, and more affluent, white world, cultural imperialism is spreading the ideals of frail, pale femininity globally via the media." pg 13

"A thin body shape is associated with success personally, professionally and socially (Bruch, 1978). pg 7

Media Causation 
"We now have damning evidence from Fiji of the impact of Western ideals of beauty where, in a three-year period after the introduction of TV (mainly US programmes), 15 per cent of the teenage girls developed bulimia. The penetration of Western images coupled with and economic onsalught, had destabilised Fijian girls' sense of beauty." (S. Orbach, 'Give us back our bodies' Observer, 24 June 2002) 

Cause - Effect analysis
"When evaluated in context of more attractive, same- sex individuals, an otherwise average- looking person may be percieved as less attractive (eiselman et al., 1984, Kenrick and Guttieres, 1980) This attractiveness contrast has also been observed in self evaluations of one's own appearance (Brown et al., 1992; Cash et al., 1983; Thornton and Moore, 1993). Not only may self perceptions of attractiveness be diminished from such comparisons, but lowered self- esteem and heightened public self- consciousness and anxiety may also result (Thornton and Moore, 1993)

Stice and Shaw 1994
"In one study, female respondents were shown 12 photographs of models taken from popular magazine, over a three minute exposure period. Subsequently, higher levels of depression, stress, guilt, shame, insecurity and body image dissatisfaction emerged when compared with prior exposure to photographs of average size models." 

Men in Advertising  
"As with women, societiety's view of men may have been shaped and re-inofrced by media images. The use and display of men in advertising could have served as a particularly potent social conditioning force in this context." (Mort, 1988; Nixon, 1996) pg 6 

Culture 
"African women, however, had the most accurate views about what men would find attractive, and Caucasian women held the most distorted views in this respect. The men, throughout, guessed that women preferred shapes bigger and bulkier than those actually indicated by the women (Demarest and Allen, 2000)"


Text 3
--- Body Image: New Research by Marlene V. Kindes (2006)

Sport

"Advertising in general has been shown to affect both males' and females' body imge, but does sports advertising affect them in the same way? This is an important question, because the representations of the body used in sports advertising may be perceived by the general public as the standard to which bodies would be compared in sport or exercise environments. This may affect the activities they choose to participate in and lead to avoidant behaviours, as they were worried about evaluating their body in a negative way (Crawford & Eklund, 1994 Hart et al., 1989; Lantz, Hardy & Ainsworth 1997)."

Anxiety 
"Social physique anxiety is a type of body image concern where individuals feel anxious regarding the prospect of others evaluating their physiques (Hart et al., 1989).

Children
"Body image has mainly been conducted in the psychiatry and psychology fields. However, very little attention has been directed to body image in the field of education (Naruse, 1977)."

"With 8- to 12-yr.- old primary school children as subjects... Rolland et al., (1996) invesitgated what children to be the most ideal physique. In all groups, girls were more likely than boys to choose pictures depicting figures physically slimmer than themselves. Much of the recent research... has concerned itself with eating disorders, with the goal of explaining the relationship between ideal body image and eating disorders such an anorexia in adolescent men and women."

Awareness of Self
"Researchers have long emphasized the importance of studying body image in the context of structure of the self, and it was in this connection that Kihlstrom and Cantor (1984) focused on the question of how body image is represented phenomenologically. If it is assumed than an image of the body, in the literal sense, is indeed be represeneted as an aspect of the self, does it play with the same role as other types of self descriptions... compare these with body shape attributes ... which are more concrete and capable of evoking a perceptual image..." 
"If so, body image attributes may play a fundamentally diffrent role in the self constructions and underlie some of the body image disturbances we see in eating disorders (Altabe & Thompson, 1996)."

Dysmorphophobia- Body Image deviation in chronic Schizophrenia 
"A subjective feeling of ugliness or physical defect that the patient feels is noticeable to others, although his appearance is within normal limits." (Phillips 1991)
"It is a distressing and impairing disorder that may lead to occupational and social dysfunction as well as unecessary and costly cosmetic surgery and dermatologic treatment." (Phillips 1991) pg 149 





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