Death By Thinness Research Paper

1180 Words3 Pages

Death by Thinness Rush through the store, try to avoid human interaction because, God forbid, someone judges another person on their appearance. Grab items necessary for survival then, the dreaded line. The woman, checking out, has a toddler racing about touching everything in its vicinity, an infant with the nastiest death glare, and the woman has to use her seven billion coupons. To distract from the chaos ahead there lies the magazine rack. Full of designer clothes, that are four sizes too small. Celebrities with their new diet plans, and tons of articles about how to look good. All of this to prevent the masses from perceiving someone as an overweight, unattractive, fool. Judith Lorber, a professor emerita of sociology and women’s studies …show more content…

People take what society tells them at face value. They do not consider their own feelings in their body image. “Most people, however, voluntarily go along with their society’s prescriptions for those of their gender status because the norms and expectations get built into their sense of worth and identity as a certain kind of human being and because they believe their society's way is the natural way’ (Lorber 732). Society’s prescriptions create an environment that breeds low self esteem for both men and women because they cannot fit society’s cookie cutter standards. American society strongly advocates this mindset. Hesse-Biber gives an example of this in a study on an island that received American TV. “When American television programming was introduced to the island in 1995, none of the girls surveyed reported that they practiced self-induced vomiting to lose weight. After 3 years of American TV exposure, that number had jumped to 11.3%. That same year, 1998, 74% of girls reported feeling ‘“‘too big or fat’ at least some of the time”’ and 62% stated that they had dieted in the last month”(Hesse-Biber 788). The impact of American society’s prescriptions caused the island’s societal views to change. The island took on the mentality that men must be muscular and women must be extremely thin. Society advocates an extremely dangerous lifestyle. Society causes people to develop a warped sense of self, push their bodies into starvation, and work out till they have no body fat. The increase of body dysmorphia among the women on the island within those three years is

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