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Announcement. Earn $40 by participate in online survey! Qualification: African American & Latino/Hispanic, age 18 or older eligible to participate. Access to computer with Internet Email: disanche@rci.rutgers.edu Call: 732-445-3552. Gender & Body. Dr. Sanchez. Class Outline .
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Announcement • Earn $40 by participate in online survey! • Qualification: • African American & Latino/Hispanic, age 18 or older eligible to participate. • Access to computer with Internet • Email: disanche@rci.rutgers.edu • Call: 732-445-3552
Gender & Body Dr. Sanchez
Class Outline • Body image • The role of media • Self-objectification • Mental Health and Interpersonal Cost • Gender Differences/Similarities • Assertiveness • Interdependent Self-Construal • Math performance
The role of the media • Product and Producer • Unrealistic images of beauty for men and women • Underrepresentation of women of color • Overrepresentation of women as “parts”
Unrealistic Body Images • The ideal female body is unattainable, unrealistic, and dangerous • Men are coming under increased pressure to obtain muscular, lean ideals (25 years) • Naked male image is more frequent in the last decade • “Metrosexual” • Still, this new emphasis on male image is not equivalent to women’s.
Images of Women of Color (Baker, 2005; Coltrane & Messaneo, 2000) • Tokenism • Under Representation Bias • Under 10% of mainstream TV ads include people of color • Subtle Racism • Inconsequential • Subservient to White • Sexual images
Women as “Parts” • Pervasive tendency to depict women’s bodies more than their faces • Faceism = index of facial prominence • Lowest Faceism Index: Black Women
Video Clip • Faceism Clip
Self-Objectification • Living in a culture that sexually objectified women more than men • Women learn to view themselves as objects • Objectification = tendency to regard one’s physical self primarily in terms of appearance and to adopt an observer’s perspective on the physical self • Mental Health and Interpersonal Costs
Self-Objectification Questionnaire • NSTRUCTIONS: We are interested in how people think about their bodies. The questions below identify 10 different attributes. We would like you to rank order these body attributes from that which has the greatest impact on your physical self-concept, to that which has the least impact on your physical self-concept. • NOTE: It does not matter how you describe yourself in terms of each attribute. For example, fitness level can have a great impact on your physical self-concept regardless of whether you consider yourself to be physically fit, not physically fit, or any level in between. • Please first read over all of the attributes. Then, record your rank by writing the letter of the attribute. • WHEN CONSIDERING YOUR PHYSICAL SELF-CONCEPT, HOW IMPORTANT IS… • 9 = most important and 0 = least important • a. physical coordination? f. physical attractiveness? • b. health? g. energy level (e.g. stamina)? • c. weight? h. firm/sculpted muscles? • d. strength? i. physical fitness level? • e. sex appeal? j. measurements • (e.g.chest, waist, hips)?
SO Score • Sum of appearance related traits • Sum of competence related traits • Subtract competence from appearance related traits • Higher numbers = Greater objectification
States of Objectification • Cover Story: Consumer Product Evaluation • Two conditions: • Women and men asked to try on speedo swimsuit or sweater • DV: Level of objectification, shame and math performance • Measure of SO • How many cookies they ate
That swimsuit becomes you • Both men and women in speedos (of various ethnicities) showed: • Lower SE • Higher Body Shame • Worse Math Performance • Greater Self-Objectification • Other outcomes? = Gender Identity, Racial Identity
Gender Differences • Main effect for gender: • Women always rated themselves higher on body shame and self-objectification. • Different methodologies: • More recent studies show that exposure to idealized images affects body image perceptions of both men and women
Measuring Up-Where does shame come from? • Fallon & Rozin (1985) • What did they do? • Ratings of average, self, and opposite sex preferences for body size • What did they find? • Women thought they were heavier than ideal • Men actually prefer heavier than women believe • Men thought they were about the same as ideal • Women actually prefer smaller than men think • What are the implications?
Mental Health and Interpersonal Correlates • Self-objectification links to eating disorder symptoms • Self-objectification linked to depression • Self-objectification linked to sexual dysfunction and satisfaction
Physiological Disconnect • Insensitivity to body sensation • Women are less accurate in estimating their heartbeat, blood glucose levels, and stomach contractions than are men. • Women’s subjective experience of arousal correlated to a lesser degree with their physiological sexual arousal than men.
Why do we care about appearance? • Appearance is often paired with ROMANCE and RELATIONSHIP SUCCESS • Women hear that men value appearance over all else! • Single Ads Study
Testing the link • Exposed men and women to relationship primes or neutral primes • Relationship primes: marriage, romance, relationship, partner • Neutral primes: door, house, gate, brick • Measured SO
The romance of self-objectification • Single Women primed with relationships self-objectified compared to single women not primed with relationships. • What if you are someone who highly values relationships?
Basing SE in Relationships • Contingencies of self-worth • The extent to which SE is connected to relationship status • Connected to higher body shame • Connected to greater symptoms of disordered eating • Connected to greater mate urgency