Title: Michael Levine, Ph.D., FAED
1Changing/Challenging the World One American Idol
at a Time What Each of Us Can Do Every Day to
Prevent Eating Disorders
Michael Levine, Ph.D., FAED Department of
Psychology, Kenyon College, Gambier, OH
43022-9623 Eating Disorders Awareness Week,
Denison University, February 25, 2009 --
Levine_at_kenyon.edu
POWERPOINTS AVAILABLE FREE at http//psychology.k
enyon.edu/levine/
2Dr. Michael Levine
- 1. Professor of Psychology, Kenyon College BMI
30.77418 obese - 2. Ph.D. in Experimental Psychology wife has
Ph.D. in Medieval history, teaches in Religious
Studies and WGS and watches Dancing with the
Stars and shops at Victorias Secret - 3. Age 59 Really likes Pat Benatar
- 4. No body images issues at all
- Note Rare photo--Michael Levine
- as assistant professor (1979)
3 Role Model
- Grew up in Southern California in 1950s
- American Idol was
- superstar
- Mickey Mantle
- Alcoholic
- Philanderer
- Non-family man
4 Of Roles, Models, and Idols
- What or who constitutes a Model?
- American Idol atry (www.m-w.com)
- 1 the worship of a physical object as a god
- 2 immoderate attachment or devotion to
something
5Rationale forPrevention
- Prevalence, severity vs. person-power shortage
- Evidence - sociocultural basis
- Gender and development
- Historical aspects (Silverstein Perlick, 1995)
- Other social changes in the
- USA (e.g., womens athletics)
- Multifaceted health promotion Obesity as
Godzilla . . . .
BMI 756
6Rationale for Prevention Knowledge, and Research
If you want to truly understand something, try
to change it
- - Kurt Lewin (1890-1947)
- (no date/source, as quoted in)
- APA Policy and Planning Board.
- (2007). Who cares about APA
- Policy and does it have an impact?
- American Psychologist, 62, 491-503.
7Some Things are Like PreventionHard to
Understand How it Could Happen,But It Needs to
be Done
Bring it!
8Preventing What? And What Does Nervosa Mean,
Anyway?
- Prevention will failand may well be harmfulif
it concentrates solely on the definition of
clinical syndromes, the portrayal of fascinating
cases, and the dangers of disordered eating. - The issue is the cost to individuals and
society of set of issues, each of which (1)
relates to negative body image and disordered
eating and (2) could be seen spectrum or
continuum - negative body image internalization
of impossible ideals - self-objectification drive for
thinness/leanness - fear of fat unhealthy weight
management - shaky self-esteem chaotic
(including binge-) eating - compensatory extremes of
activity/exercise - extremes (perfectionism)
9Levines Recommended Principles of Truly Primary
Prevention
- The issue for prevention is us and our
cultures, not them and their eating disorders
or their obesity. Thus we must think
contextually and in terms of how each member of
the community can contribute
10Do You Think Barbie Still Dreams of Ken?
Barbie Ken (1950s)
Michael Levine as undergraduate in The Iliad
(1968)
Spawn
11Prevention and treatment are not just a female
issue they are a community issue that involves
boys and men in various ways.
Head Optional Whatever. . .
- Blue Oyster Cult Syndrome (BOCS) Im Burning
for You.
12The Adonis Ideal
- Mesomorphic ideal
- Men are defined by size, power, and strength
- Lean muscular attractive
- muscularity manly success
- muscularity health
All Muscle except for Fat in Head
13American Idols
- Tales of Glory Spirit Warrior Action Figures
14Sometimes it is Hard to Love the One Body
Youre With
15Pervasive Messages--Multiple Sources
- Health professionals
- Parents
- Educators
- Mass media
- Books
- Peers
- Citizens
16Sometimes Its Hard . . . .Taking on the Hydra
- Weightist prejudice
- Object-ification
- Identity as a Double Bind
- Insecurity trap gt
- Perfection
- Abandonment
Note cool picture of Hydra
17The Real F-Word
-
- You look great,
- youve put on fat!
18Us Weekly The Hyprocritic OathEasily
Extracted Messages
- WEIGHTISM
- Prejudice
- Vilification of fat
- fat people,
- especially females
- Glorification of slenderness
19Fat People Spoil the Environment
- Fat people lack self-control
- Fat people are neurotic and overeat for
psychological reasons - Weight and shape are highly malleable
- Fat and weight make you sick thin is healthier
- Fat people cannot be physically fit
- Fat people need to diet, and fatter people need
to diet a lot (more)
20Beauty Standards1940s 1950s
21Beauty Standards 1950s - 1960s
22Beauty Standards1970s 1980s
23Beauty Standards 1990s
24Beauty Standards 2003
25But. . . But. . . But What?
26Summer 2004 Still the Objectof My Gaze (and
Your Own?)
27No, Really You are Still the Objectof My Gaze
(and Your Own?) 2005
- Bad Ad Contest Winner for 2005, New Mexico
Media Literacy Project - www.mnmlp.org
- Submitted by Max Africk. Isidore Newman
School, New Orleans LATeacher Ann Sayas
Open Season Advertisement for __________?
Everybody wants a piece of Dentyne Gum
28Youll Always Be the Object of My Attention
29Easily Extracted Messages VIII But. . . But
When Tempted To Overindulge (1930)
We do not say smoking Luckies reduces flesh. We
do say that when tempted to overindulge, reach
for a Lucky instead.
30Mothers Little Helpers andGosh-Darn the
Pusher
Amphetamines
31I know weve come a long way were changing
day-to-day
Woman 112 lbs Body wt 111 lbs Pantsuit 1 lb
BMI at 58 is 16.9
32Return to Gender Address Well Known
33A Recent Media-Based Ericksonian Pscyhosocial
Stage Identity Diffused and Refused and Suffused
Head Optional
34Identity Diffused and Refused and Suffused
(continued ad nauseum)
Any culture that treats its women as children
and its children as women is going to have major
problems with images, bodies, and body images
(Smolak Levine, 1990s)
35Raging Against Cultures Machines will be
Challenging because it inevitably means
confronting and challenging pervasive ecological
messages Gender, Class, Race, and Power
- Womens bodies belong to men
- A woman of substance and power
- is a frightening, ugly thing
- Success is narrowly defined and it
- means being up to date and stylish
- Diversity in physical appearance and
- in culture is undesirable
- Women must negotiate dramatic changes in
cultures--and do it in a quiet, pleasing way
36Everyday Acts of Rebellion and Machine-Focused
Raging (MFR) Take OvariesCulture change
requires a critical/analytic perspective,
attention to social justice, and activism--and
thus it requires dialogue, collaboration, and
courage.
- This cause is not altogether and exclusively
womens cause. It is the cause of human
brotherhood as well as human sisterhood, and both
must rise and fall together. Woman cannot be
elevated without elevating man, and man cannot be
depressed without depressing woman also. - - Frederick Douglas
- 1848
37Its Time to Stand Up and Take onSpace The
Final Frontier
- Work to surround yourself with, and connect
yourself and your loved ones to, women of
substance women who take up space in the world
and have something to say about it
38Principle Prevention and Education requires a
critical/analytic perspective, attention to
social justice, and activism--and thus it
requires dialogue, collaboration, and courage.
Mae Jemison, M.D. First African American Astronaut
- Elizabeth Cady Stanton
- 1815-1902
- Reformer 1848.
39Which one of the these women is a Model?
Nobel Prize for Literature, 1993
Xena, Warrior Princess Doll/Action Figure
Spain - 2007
Ms. Chloe Anthony Wofford
40Role Model (www.m-w.com)
- A person whose behavior in a particular role is
imitated by others
41The Personal Basic or Model Questions
- Do you have at least one role model?
- List 3 characteristics that make that person a
role model for you? - Do you own or have access to a picture or image
of that person? - Do you have that picture or image prominently
featured in your dorm room? - Have you ever talked with a close friend or lover
about that role model -- who is it? Why he she is
a role model for you? What that person means in
your life?
42Principle The 5 Cs of Preventionafter Sigall
Pabst, 2000
- - Consciousness-raising
- - Competence
- - Connection
- - Change
- - Choices
43Multifaceted Health PromotionNegative body
image, disordered eating, and obesity On
shared ground HAES Philosophy (Robison, 2003)
- Self and diversity acceptance, supported
supported by people who care about you as a whole
person - Enjoying physical activity and a more active
lifestyle in accord-ance with needs and rights - Making more peaceful, social, and celebratory
relationships with nutritious, nourishing food - Living better through critical consciousness and
everyday acts of rebellion
44What are We Waiting For?Its Time, No?
- At the age of six I wanted to be a cook. At
seven I wanted to be Napoleon. And my ambition
has been growing steadily ever since. - Salvador Dali
Soft Watch at the Moment of First Explosion, 1954
45Challenge and Hope of Prevention
Piran, 1999
Goldberg, Elliot, and colleagues
Neumark-Sztainer et al. (2000)
46But What, Like, Really, Can Anybody Do?Being
the Change A Parallel Process
- Kenyon
- 2001-2002 ?
- Andy Mills Becky
- Osborn Erica
- Neitz (01)
- (with support from
- Levine, Smolak, Murnen)
47Hope is Everywhere and so is determination and
skill
- A great model an ongoing narrative of
courage, resistance, and change is the Red
Wing, MN GO GIRLSTM program work guided by Sarah
Stinson
48A Small Group of Citizens -- NEDA andEating
Disorders Awareness Week
- First EDAW Mt. Vernon/Knox County Fall 1983
- First National EDAW 1987
- 20th Anniversary
Feb. 14, 2007
49Love Or at Least Accept and Care For the Body
Youre With
- Body dissatisfaction is neither feminine nor
normal - in the sense of being natural and unchangeable
- Body dissatisfaction is not motivational
- Body dissatisfaction is typically not harmless
- Body dissatisfaction often feeds on prejudice,
trauma, and objectification
50Body Image Remember and Practice The Bill of
Rights I have and will exercise the right to
- Nourish my body and spirit
- Appreciate my body, which will never be perfect
- Feel good in and about my body
- Remind myself There are hundreds of very
admirable people whose body shapes vary
tremendously
- Remind myself, constantly if necessary, of the
following 10 or more good things about my body - Be fit and energetic, no matter what I look like
- To dance, swim, sunbathe, and be active no matter
what I look like - To wear clothes that are comfortable and express
my selfmy styleno matter what I look like
51Body Image Be a Real Super Model
- Reject weight-ism as an untenable form
- of prejudice
- Modify your body image, not your
- weight and shape
- a. Practice refusing self-criticism,
- not restricting
- b. Draining the mirror scale
- c. Drunk on the street test
- Make contact with people, not war
- on your body, your mind, your spirit.
- Refuse to play the BDG
- Hills Daily Diet of Praise Affirming
- skill, strength, care, presence
52THE PERSONAL Body Image Be a Real Super Model
- Study culture, cultures,
- history, gender, resistance,
- transformation--for both
- boys and girls
- Talk to others, making
- the private into the public
- Promote safety, respect,
- and substance
53THE PERSONAL Goal Models in Historyand
Narratives of Resistance (after Sigall Pabst)
- The young are looking for living models whom they
can imitate and who are capable of rousing their
enthusiasm and drawing them to a deeper kind of
life. - More than anything else, the young need sure
guides to go with them on the paths of liberation
that God maps out for them. -
- -- Archbishop Bakole wa
- Ilunga (1920-2000)
- retrieved 2-22-09 from
- http//www.livinglifefully.com/rolemodels.htm
54ITS TIME TO STAND UP IF -- YOU REALLY BELIEVE
THAT
- The type of person
- you are your
- character,
- your substance,
- your spirit and guts
- are more important
- than your weight or pants size.
Madame Curie
55ITS TIME TO STAND UP IF -- YOU REALLY BELIEVE
THAT
- Every person
- is entitled to
- respect and dignity
- no matter what their
- size and shape,
- their apparent fitness,
- the color of their skin,
- or their gender
56ITS TIME TO STAND UP IF -- YOU REALLY BELIEVE
THAT
- Individual differences -- diversity -- in height
and weight and body shape are a very bad thing,
and that all girls should be tall and thin, while
all boys should be tall and muscular People
should be more like the manikins in the store
Model for Rosa Cha Spring 2007 Fashion
Week 9-14-06
57ITS TIME TO STAND UP IF YOU REALLY BELIEVE
THAT
- People -- and especially
- girls -- should treat their bodies as objects,
things, and commodities to be sculpted, starved,
leered at, jeered at, sneered at, and painted
into shape -- that peoples bodies are in many
ways no different than cars. . . .
Body by Fisher (Body/Motor Corporation) 1920s
58ITS TIME TO STAND UP IF -- YOU REALLY BELIEVE
THAT
- You can tell how good a person is -- how
talented, caring, friendly, trustworthy, funny,
spirited, spiritual -- by watching what they eat
and seeing how muscular they are and/or how much
they weigh
59ITS TIME TO STAND UP IF -- YOU REALLY BELIEVE
THAT
- People should work together with their family,
their friends, their colleagues, their church,
and other groups who refuse to keep silent and to
sit still when they see injustice and lack of
necessary resources in the world That it is
important to take a stand for what is right and
decent. . . .
60Planning the Day for Prevention
-
- It is hard to know when to respond to the
seductiveness of the world and when to respond to
its challenge. If the world were merely
seductive, that would be easy. If it were merely
challenging, that would be no problem. But I
arise in the morning torn between the desire to
improve the world and a desire to enjoy the
world. This makes it hard to plan the day. . . . -
- E. B. White
61Hope is the Thing with Feathers . . . .
- Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful
committed citizens can change the world. Indeed,
its the only thing that ever has. - -- Margaret Mead
-
Pillars of Fulfillment Tribute to Dr. Lori
Irving by Women Who Weld Washington State
University, Vancouver, WA
62And the Wisdom to Know the Difference