“I Love My Body, but Hers is Better!” Body Positivity and Social Media Among College Women

IF 2.6 3区 心理学 Q1 FAMILY STUDIES
Nicole Taylor, Mimi Nichter
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Abstract

This qualitative study explores how college women interpret and negotiate body positivity messages that appear alongside unattainable body image ideals on social media. The sample consisted of 44 undergraduate college women between the ages of 18 and 23. Methods included semi-structured interviews and focus groups. Using content analysis, the following key themes were identified: a persistent culture of comparison online that reinforced a narrow body ideal alongside an imperative to love your body at any size; skepticism about whether the body positivity movement could create meaningful or enduring cultural change; and the use of fat talk and other self-disparaging online strategies to mitigate critique from others and elicit compliments. Results suggest that women endeavored to internalize the values of body positivity even as they struggled to enact them online. Social media, an ever-changing environment, emerged as a key social and developmental context within which emerging adults negotiate body image ideologies.
"我爱我的身体,但她的更好!"女大学生的身体正能量与社交媒体
这项定性研究探讨了女大学生如何解读和协商社交媒体上出现的身体积极性信息以及无法实现的身体形象理想。样本包括 44 名年龄在 18 至 23 岁之间的本科女大学生。研究方法包括半结构式访谈和焦点小组。通过内容分析,确定了以下关键主题:网上持续存在的攀比文化强化了狭隘的身体理想,同时也要求人们爱护自己的身体,无论体型如何;对身体积极性运动是否能带来有意义或持久的文化变革持怀疑态度;使用肥胖言论和其他自我贬低的网络策略来减轻他人的批评并获得赞美。研究结果表明,女性努力内化身体积极性的价值观,即使她们努力在网上实现这些价值观。社交媒体是一个不断变化的环境,是新兴成年人协商身体形象意识形态的关键社会和发展环境。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Emerging Adulthood
Emerging Adulthood Multiple-
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
19.20%
发文量
87
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