Media and Body Image

1001 Words3 Pages

Popular culture has a large influence on everyone; it can persuade or entice its audience. One part of popular culture that has a large influence on the general population is how women displayed are in mass media. Women in popular culture show indirectly that being thin is successful and beautiful. With this false message transmitted, serious problems occur. The influence of women in popular culture and how they present themselves can be a breeding place for physical and emotional unrest. When women are objectified in popular culture, they set a standard on how one should appear.
Popular culture is transmitting subliminal messages on the must-be waist size of average teenager girls. One can see successful women in mass media and cannot help but associate their success with how they appear, thin. Amiee Nicole Hoffman states that “Study after study has proven that repeated exposure to ideal beauty as portrayed by the media causes detrimental psychological effects in children and adolescents ranging from distorted body images and lowered self-esteem to eating disorders and steroid use.” (1). Adolescents may be under the impression that the body shape of “skinny” they perceive in media is harmless, but overtime they may see it as normal.
Hoffman states “While both males and females are affected by media exposure, females, who generally experience greater preoccupation and dissatisfaction with their physical appearances, tend to internalize messages from the media more often and are therefore more commonly targeted.” (2). Females take “skinny” as a serious beauty standard; and begin to take these images into consideration. As the images flow through their minds, they wonder “how do I look like that?” Various solutions flow through ...

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Hilton, Lisa. "The Fashion Industry Should Not Be Held Responsible for Eating Disorders." Eating Disorders. Ed. Roman Espejo. Detroit: Greenhaven Press, 2012. Opposing Viewpoints. Rpt. from "What's Wrong with Skinny?" thedailybeast.com. 2010. Opposing Viewpoints in Context. Web. 21 Nov. 2013.
Hoffmann, Aimee N. PDF. N.p.: University of Maine, 2004.
Irving, Jennifer A. An Exploration of the Influence of Media, Advertising, and Popular Culture on the Self Esteem, Identity, and Body Image in Adolescent Girls. Northampton, Massachusetts: Smith College School for Social Work, 2008. PDF.
King, Natalie, Stephen Touyz, and Margaret Charles. "The Effect Of Body Dissatisfaction On Women's Perceptions Of Female Celebrities." International Journal Of Eating Disorders 27.3 (2000): 341-347. Social Sciences Full Text (H.W. Wilson). Web. 19 Nov. 2013.

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