The media is responsible for creating ideals about beauty and body image, it can influence self esteem and acceptance, but can cause major harm. The media tends to make people strive to achieve an unrealistic image of perfection, a stereotype of beauty, and have led to a decline in self acceptance. Teenagers learn what society deems beautiful mainly from the media, they are overwhelmed with photos, magazines, television and movies on what is considered the ideal body (“Body Image”). According to the article, “Recent studies have found that by the time a woman is seventeen years old, she has received more than 250,000 commercial messages through the media” (“Body Image”). The majority of the media today presents the perfect body to the public,…
Especially in the Asian American community, young women, such as myself, are often culturally pressured to look thin, dress more modestly, and act fragile. Within the Asian American society, body image issues are prevalent because the expectation of being naturally slender is quite common. If people did not follow the norms of appearances, fashion, or behavior, they frequently feel a sense of ostracization from society. Though, not everyone feels subjected to the particular stereotypes or exclusions due to diverse experiences and…
In the article “Distorted Images: Western Cultures are Exporting Their Dangerous Obsession with Thinness,” author Susan McClelland’s mainly focuses on how many young women idolize the women they see on T.V. The media is making many women feel as if they need to look a certain way to fit in with the world. Also the fact the western culture is spreading to other countries is a big issue because sicknesses, like bulimia, were not an issue before. Many women in other countries are starting to look at the women in the United States and want to be just like them. In this article, the author says that television, magazines, and media show young women that they need to be tall, skinny, and white to be successful in finding a job or even a love life. Throughout the essay, the author showed professional knowledge on the topic she was writing about, evidence from other sources, and the use of emotion; this article was strong and persuasive toward McClelland’s argument.…
Remodel your nose, show your chest, and bend over for the camera. This is basically the message society is sending to women today. If you conform to the world’s idea of what a woman should look like then you will be accepted. In the two articles “The Pitfalls of Plastic Surgery” by Camille Paglia and “The Beauty Myth” by Naomi Wolf, the way women have responded to the message from society is discussed from both perspectives. Wolf is clearly against women's confinement to societal pressures. She reveals that there is a "secret underlie poisoning our freedom," referring to the way women focus on appearance and fitting in (Wolf 10). Paglia's argument focuses on the extent of women using plastic surgery to become what they believe society wants them to be. She writes about the way women have made themselves their own "works of art," taking plastic surgery to higher levels in the industry. Wolf emphasizes the way women have changed their values over the years. She makes an emotional appeal by concluding that the "contemporary ravages" are "destroying women physically and depleting us psychologically"(Wolf 19). Over time, society has influenced women to confine themselves to what the world believes is beauty instead of embracing the power of being a woman and focusing on their place in the economy.…
These models and actresses being thin which creates a “…norm for body image in present-day culture, and it’s characterized by bodies that are extremely thin”(42). And women look to these models as the epitome of beauty. “Consequently, women who are heavy viewers of thin-ideal media may develop the attitude that thinness is socially desirable”(42). Even though people may not notice, but over time things seen in media get compared to the real world. As one of the main media’s standards of beauty being “thinness often has a positive connotation, one that denotes success and social…
How does the media influence our body image? In what forms, does the media influence our perceptions about our body? These were the two questions that I asked myself in order to do the research paper and the panel discussion. In my opinion, I would agree that the media does influence and promote women and men to believe that the culture's standards for body image are ideal. Hence, the phrases, "thin is in" and "the perfect body" are two examples of "eye-catching" headlines that I observed in many women magazines. I learned that the media influences us through television, fashion and health magazines, music videos, film, commercials, and various other advertisements. Sadly, as a result, this repeated exposure, the "thin" ideal, can lead many young girls in triggering eating disorders, depression, low self-esteem, stress, and suicide. After acquiring this relevant information, I decided to focus my research on what type of media influences elementary school children and the adolescent teenager. The three central types of media that I found that did indeed influence body image are: Fashion magazines, famous top-models and actresses, and teenage or young adult women in the music industry.…
Images of female bodies are everywhere. Women, and their bodies, sell everything from food to cars. Women's magazines are full of articles urging women to fit a certain mold. While standing in a grocery store line you can see all different magazines promoting fashion, weight loss, and the latest diet. Although the magazines differ, they all seemingly convey the same idea: if you have the perfect body image you can have it all the perfect marriage, loving children, great sex, and a rewarding career. The media, whether TV, print, or Internet advertising, seems to play a huge role in influencing women of all ages; from adolescence and teens, to women in their twenties and thirties, as well as menopausal and post-menopausal women. Of course, American females take the information differently depending on age, life experiences, and where they are in their lives. Today we will examine the influence the media (TV, print, the Internet, and advertising) has on the American female's feelings toward her place in society, as well as her sexuality, self-esteem and body image, and physical health.…
Anyone who is familiar with American culture knows that many of these cultural standards are established in the media. “We are constantly surrounded by all sorts of media and we construct our identities in part through media images we see,” Cutler remarked. And the more girls are exposed to thin-ideal kinds of media, the more they are dissatisfied with their bodies and with themselves overall.…
Currently in America Culture there is a prevailing desire to become thin. "Between five per cent and ten per cent of girls and women (i.e. five-ten million people) and one million boys and men suffer from eating disorders, including anorexia, bulimia, binge eating disorder, or other associated dietary conditions." (http://www.annecollins.com/eating-disorders/statistics.htm) So many people are influenced by the media that it transforms their own self image into unrealistic ideas leading many adolescent females and some males to eating disorders. Our society is driven for individual control thus forming the judgment that fatness is a loss of self-control which is a social value and a personal moral in our culture that is a boundless failure and the most feared among women. The definition of self control within the body image has changed throughout the last century, in the early eighteen hundred's corpulence was seen as strong and beautiful whereas now it is looked down upon. This desire to be thin contributes to eating disorders, low self esteem and continues the battle of acceptance into society. Beauty is acceptance which is defined by the time period and is enforced by the media.…
Women around the world, from different age groups and cultures share a common problem; they are not happy with their appearances. Most images of ideal beauty imposed by various media devices make women feel that they do not meet the cultural or social standard. "Women are, taught to see their bodies in parts, and to evaluate each part separately. Breasts, feet, hips, waistline, neck, eyes, nose, complexion, hair, and so on-each in turn is submitted to an anxious, fretful, often despairing scrutiny." (Sontag) Women see magazines from cover to cover in which unrealistically beautiful and skinny girls are collaged on ever single page. Body image is greatly affected by the mass media 's portrayal of the thin ideal body type.…
Polivy, J., Herman, C. (2004) Sociocultural Idealization of Thin Female Body Shapes: An Introduction to the Special Issue on Body Image and Eating Disorders. Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology Vol.23, Iss. 1; pg. 1, 6…
In “Reaching the Slender Body” Susan Bordo deeply analyzes the cultural, psychological, and gender factors that influence body image in the modern era, including the underlying manifestation of power over the self and changing cultural attitudes. There is no denying that humans prefer ascetic beauty just as bees are attracted to vibrant flowers which is why some people believe a warped version of the good life is to achieve societal standards of beauty which in turn is subliminally achieving virtues. The cost is often times one’s physical and mental health as well as an obsessive condemnation of everything that is “imperfect” of a person. In reality, gender norms and societal perceptions change what is “the idea body type” therefore achieving it is like chasing the wind. In today’s culture “slimness” is translated by some as being the tangible…
Body Image, in the Merriam- Dictionary it states that it is “a subjective picture of one's own physical appearance established both by self-observation and by noting the reactions of others”. Millions of people all around the world have an obsession, rather a secret obsession. That obsession is about how they look, or in other words their body image. Many People wouldn’t mind having a flatter stomach and a smaller waist size. Also, they worry that their thighs are too chubby, their arms are not built enough, or their breasts are too small. Most importantly people care about how they look. These insecurities are the idea of the media and…
Recent studies suggest that a desire to be slender is becoming more and more common across cultures, particularly in individuals who have much contact with Western media and culture. In the study of Mumford and Choudry (2000), white and Asian women living in London and women living in Pakistan who were all recruited from slimming clubs and gyms scored similarly on body esteem and attitudes to eating.…
The first time I read Bordo’ s essay, Beauty (Re) discovers the Male Body, I was shocked by what she wrote, because I had never read any articles like this. It was explicitly telling about naked or near-naked models in advertisement, nude women attracted men and also nude men attracted women, and these kinds of ads influenced people’s view on what a real man was exactly. There were few books mentioned naked men or women, but never in specific detail. I felt really awkward when I read this book in the coffee store; I was afraid other people saw what I was reading. I closed it immediately. I came from China; Chinese culture taught me to feel extremely shameful about allowing other people to see our naked body. In the ancient time of China, people had to use clothes to cover all body parts, both male and female. The body was the thing people never showed to others, only someone who was really close to them, such as their husband or wife, mom or dad. Besides, people should never gaze at a naked person for a long time. In most Chinese people’s thoughts, only the people who sold sex or used their body to make money would be willing to reveal their body. And those jobs were illicit, and those people who were doing those jobs would be discriminated and hated by most Chinese people. They wouldn’t have relationships with them, or speak to them, or even stay near them. But, in the past 10 years, things went differently. Naked or near-naked female ads showed up on TV and on the street. The first near naked women ad I saw was a body wash ad (the picture on left corner of last page), name of the company was Shulei. At the beginning, no one could accept that a near-nude woman was in the ad; the company lost a lot of loyal customers. This new form of advertisement shocked them. It was against their views about the naked body. But, within a few months, the amount of selling numbers showed this new strategy was very successful. People were…