Media and Body Image

920 Words2 Pages

Looking beautiful and having a thin body has become a norm today, which everyone wants to achieve it today. People are bombarded with amazing beautiful images from watching television, surfing the internet and reading magazines, which forces people emotionally to become like them. People believe today that perfect beauty and thinness is a norm and it is achievable by wearing beautiful clothes, applying makeup and by reshaping the body. Media has taken over people mind by pressurizing them to look like celebrities and one of those images sticking on those beauty and health relates magazines and ads. Media has made beauty business a huge hype. Showing white faces, selling different kinds of creams and serums, is just making women self esteem go down. Women become insecure about their beauty and bodies, which makes them to buy clothes and diet products to reform them. According to the Yahoo News, “Research indicates that exposure to images of thin, young, air-brushed female bodies is linked to depression, loss of self-esteem and the development of unhealthy eating habits in women and girls” (Shaw). People view images everywhere and wish to be like them, but those images are just some airbrush photos which are corrected by technology by hiding blemishes and dark circles. Celebrities often misguide regular people by getting themselves perfect bodies by crash diets and exposing their bodies in public, so that people can get an idea to get changed. Often people forget that in reality, even celebrities are like them only. Celebrities do have blemishes, dark circles, acnes and marks on their faces, which are corrected and hidden by makeup. Celebrities also have fat in their bodies, but they just do diets and routine fast, which makes t... ... middle of paper ... ...ich is too precious. Works Cited Boyd, Hannah. “Girls and Body Image: Loving the She’s in”. March 15 2010 http://www.education.com/magazine/article/Girls_and_Body_Image_Help_Your/ Hirsch, David. “Body Image and Children”. February 25 2010 < http://children.webmd.com/building-healthy-body-image-for-children>. Jean Kilbourne, Deadly Persuasion: Why Women and Girls Must Fight the Addictive Power of Advertising (New York: The Free Press, 1999) Katharine D. Gapinski, Kelly D. Brownell, Marianne LaFrance, Body Objectification and "Fat Talk": Effects on Emotion, Motivation, and Cognitive Performance, Sex Roles 48, nos. 9/10 (May 2003) Slevec, Julie and Marika Tiggemann. "ATTITUDES TOWARD COSMETIC SURGERY IN. MIDDLE-AGED WOMEN: BODY IMAGE, AGING ANXIETY, AND THE MEDIA." Psychology of Women Quarterly 34.1 (2010): 65+. Academic One File. Web. 3 Aug. 2010

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