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izvor podataka: crosbi

Body Dissatisfaction in College Women and Their Mothers: Cohort Effects, Developmental Effects, and the Influences of Body Size, Sexism, and the Thin Body Ideal (CROSBI ID 123224)

Prilog u časopisu | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija

Gordon, Forbes ; Adams-Curtis, Leah ; Jobe, Rebecca ; White, Kay ; Revak, Jessica ; Živčić-Bećirević, Ivanka ; Pokrajac-Bulian, Alessandra Body Dissatisfaction in College Women and Their Mothers: Cohort Effects, Developmental Effects, and the Influences of Body Size, Sexism, and the Thin Body Ideal // Sex roles, 53 (2005), 281-298-x

Podaci o odgovornosti

Gordon, Forbes ; Adams-Curtis, Leah ; Jobe, Rebecca ; White, Kay ; Revak, Jessica ; Živčić-Bećirević, Ivanka ; Pokrajac-Bulian, Alessandra

engleski

Body Dissatisfaction in College Women and Their Mothers: Cohort Effects, Developmental Effects, and the Influences of Body Size, Sexism, and the Thin Body Ideal

A study of body dissatisfaction, as measured by the Figure Rating Scale (Stunkard, Sorenson, & Schlusinger, 1983) and the Body Esteem Scale (Franzoi & Shields, 1984), in 75 college women and their mothers indicated that both daughters and mothers experienced body dissatisfaction. When body size was statistically controlled, either no difference was found between the groups or daughters were found to have greater body dissatisfaction than mothers. The results supported the hypotheses that (1) there are generational differences in body dissatisfaction, (2) both cohort and developmental effects contribute to these differences, and (3) that a developmental effect (mothers’ greater body size) may obscure a cohort effect (daughters’ greater exposure to the thin body ideal). Body dissatisfaction measures based on the mothers’ retrospective ratings of how they felt at their daughters’ age were consistent with these hypotheses. Relationships between body dissatisfaction and the Sociocultural Attitudes Toward Appearance Questionnaire (Heinberg, Thompson, & Stormer, 1995) were stronger and more frequent for daughters than for mothers and for the Internalization Scale than for the Awareness Scale. Relationships between the Ambivalent Sexism Inventory (Glick & Fiske, 2001) and body dissatisfaction were stronger for mothers than for daughters and for Benevolent Sexism than for Hostile Sexism.

body dissatisfaction; generation difference; thin body ideal

nije evidentirano

nije evidentirano

nije evidentirano

nije evidentirano

nije evidentirano

nije evidentirano

Podaci o izdanju

53

2005.

281-298-x

objavljeno

0360-0025

Povezanost rada

Psihologija

Indeksiranost