Lupine Publishers | Scholarly Journal Of Psychology And Behavioral Sciences
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Abstract
Since the beginning of Humanity history,
women are one of the main focuses of attention. Women have to deal with beauty
standards which are dynamic and are changing over time. Thus the actual beauty
standard is very thin: to be beautiful, women have to be very thin. But women
bodies in ads are retouched and unrealistic. Hence, when women with real bodies
are confronted to thin-ideal bodies, they are, in fact, confronted to an
unattainable standard of women beauty. By now, many findings suggest that
repeated exposure to such unrealistic standards have negative and significative
implications on women. Some of these effects could certainly be avoided if
individuals, and especially women, were better informed about the unrealistic
and harmful nature of this norm and its consequences.
Keywords: Objectivation; Thin Ideal;
Advertisements; Women
Introduction
Since the beginning of Humanity
history, women are one of the main focuses of attention. They have a lot of
duties; have to adopt specific behaviors and to be good mothers and good wives.
Specifically, women’s bodies are, since several decades, in the spotlight too.
Women have to deal with beauty standards which are dynamic and are changing
over time. With the apparition of mass media, the social pressure doesn’t only
come from pairs and parents but also from media [1]. By now, mass media is
considered as the most powerful and persuasive source of influence [2-4] as
they are constantly surrounded by advertisements even when we do not
necessarily pay much attention to Most ads (whatever the promoted product) use
women bodies which depict the ideal norm of feminine beauty. Women in ads are
presented as perfect, thin, beautiful, with smooth skin, very white teeth and
unrealistic measurements [5]. Since the 1980s to the 1990s, we observe a
significant decrease in the weight of female models [6] as models are now
mostly underweight. Thus the actual beauty standard is very thin: to be
beautiful, women have to be very thin. But women bodies in ads are retouched
and unrealistic. Hence, when women with real bodies are confronted to thin
ideal bodies, they are, in fact, confronted to an unattainable standard of
women beauty. By now, many findings suggest that repeated exposure to such
unrealistic standards have negative and significative implications on women. By
setting what is appreciable or desirable in a woman [7], standards provide
women with indicators to assess their own bodies. Social comparison with the
weight standard contributes to the construction of women’s image of their own
bodies [8] and since the standard is excessively thin , many women overestimate
their weight, and even perceive themselves as overweight when they are
objectively not [9]. Moreover, a perception of excess weight lead women to
suffer from “normative discontent” [8] and a body dissatisfaction [10,11] which
can affect women’s quality of life by generating low self-esteem [12], anxiety
and even depression [13] and a greater accessibility of suicidal thoughts [14].
It also generates negative behavioral consequences: women who are dissatisfied
with their bodies tend to use fast, harmful and unhealthy weight loss eating
and physical practices [15], and weight overestimation predicts the use of
behaviors that lead individuals to gain weight [16-19].
Conclusion
In addition, the thinness standard
makes overweight synonymous with normative deviance. People who are overweight
are the target of stereotypes: they are suspected of eating in secret, refusing
to control their diet, losing control of themselves when eating, and
over-consuming [20-22]. Overweight women are specifically considered as not
being feminine and sensual [23]. Moreover, overweight individuals experience
significant stigmatization [23-25] which obviously affects their quality of life
and food behaviors. It also may also lead women who perceive themselves as
overweight to make poor food choices and to consume more fatty and sweet foods
through stereotype threat [25,26]. Some of these effects could certainly be
avoided if individuals, and especially women, were better informed about the
unrealistic and harmful nature of this norm and its consequences.
Unfortunately, only a few are. We believe that public policies should address
this limit and provide women the key elements to limit the negative
consequences of exposure to the slimming standard, particularly in advertising.
https://lupinepublishers.com/psychology-behavioral-science-journal/fulltext/women-in-advertisements-women-or-objectified-thin-bodies.ID.000151.phphttps://lupinepublishers.com/psychology-behavioral-science-journal/pdf/SJPBS.MS.ID.000151.pdf
For more Lupine Publishers Open Access Journals Please visit our website: https://lupinepublishersgroup.com/
For more Psychology And Behavioral Sciences Please Click
Here:https://lupinepublishers.com/psychology-behavioral-science-journal/
To Know more Open Access Publishers Click on Lupine Publishers
Follow on Linkedin : https://www.linkedin.com/company/lupinepublishers
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