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Reshaping Body Image

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Title: Reshaping Body Image


1
Reshaping Body Image
How are overweight and obese people treated in
our society?
2
Directions
  • 1. I am going to show you 5 pictures. I want you
    to write your first impression for each picture.
    (No discussion ?)

3
A. What are your first impressions?
4
B.
  • B

5
(No Transcript)
6
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7
(No Transcript)
8
Discussion

What were some of the first words that came to
mind about these people?
Did you have any impressions about the health and
happiness of each person? What were they?


Did you have any impressions about the level of
intelligence or success of each person? What were
they?

Did you write down any words about how attractive
or unattractive each person is? What words did
you use?

Did you write down any words about the body size
or shape of each person? Which ones? What words
did you use to describe their bodies?

Were your first impressions of the women
different from your feelings about the men? How
about the white people as compared to the people
of color?
9
Size
  • Is there anyone who did not think about the size
    of these people?
  • Although each person looks happy, healthy or
    active, the first impression many people have is
    about their body size
  • 2. Where do we get our ideas about what body
    shape size is attractive healthy?
  • 3. What are some negatives about how we obtain
    information and/or are influenced by this
    information?
  • Ideas in our society are so ingrained that most
    of us take them for granted accept them as
    natural normal.

10
History
  • Up until the 20th century, stoutness was
    associated with good health, affluence elevated
    social status, while thin people were often
    regarded as poor unattractive
  • From the earliest times, depictions of human
    beings such as the Venus figurines sculptures
    of fertility goddesses celebrated large size as
    a sign of well-being prosperity
  • In WWI, concerns about food shortages led to
    claims that gaining weight was unpatriotic
  • 1930s-40s anti-fat attitudes took hold
  • 1950s medical inventions (surgery drugs) were
    introduced to fight fatness
  • 1960s models like Twiggy replaced more
    voluptuous figures like Marilyn Monroe

11
Images
  • For the following images
  • 4. Which images surprised you? Why?

12
now
then
Lillian Russell Actress and Sex symbol, early
20th century (200 lbs)
Angelina Jolie Actress Sex symbol, 21st century
13
now
then
Babe Ruth Pro baseball player, early 20th century
Mike Trout Pro baseball player, 21st century
14
now
then
King Henry VIII 16th century
President Obama 21st century
15
now
then
Miss America contestant 1950s
Miss America 2013
16
Cross-Cultural Comparisons
  • Western standards of beauty are not universal.
  • In central Africa, Massa men are made to drink
    milk for 3-month periods to produce large,
    radiant bodies that symbolize beauty
  • In other African cultures, women also enter into
    fattening periods to increase their beauty
    fertility
  • Moroccan Saharawi women use drugs, traditional
    suppositories, inactivity overfeeding to fatten
    themselves in preparation for marriage
  • Pacific Islanders find a fuller figured body
    representing status, power, authority, wealth
    fertility most attractive
  • Countries that rank high on individualism
    (Australia, Poland the U.S.) show greater
    anti-fat attitudes than those ranked lower on
    individualism (India, Turkey, Venezuela)

17
there
here
American dancer ballet
New Zeland dancers performing Maori haka
18
there
here
American Wrestlers
Japanese Sumo Wrestlers
19
Race Gender Lines
  • Variations in attitudes toward body size exist
    within U.S. subculture.
  • Research indicates that non-white adults are more
    accepting of larger body shapes, hold more
    positive body images, are less likely to
    stigmatize overweight people
  • White women are more dissatisfied with their
    bodies than African American women despite the
    fact that African American women weigh on average
    10 pounds more.
  • In one study 13-14 year old overweight black
    girls were found to have similar levels of
    self-esteem to average weight girls while
    self-esteem was significantly lower in overweight
    white Hispanic girls

20
Race Gender Lines
  • Both white and African American women
  • Rated thin white women more attractive but only
    white women negatively rated the fat womans
    intelligence, job success happiness
  • On average, African American men showed more
    acceptance for large body types than White men
  • Men have a more positive body image than women
    often overestimate their attractiveness as
    compared to women
  • Women are generally more discontent with their
    appearance than men (often due to body weight)
  • Girls as young as 6 are going on diets because
    they think they are fat by age 9, half of all
    girls have gone on a diet

21
Questions continued
  • 5. How have ideas about body image in our society
    changed over time? What do you think caused these
    changes? Do you think they will shift again in
    the future?
  • http//www.today.com/video/today/54515687
  • 6. How are ideas about body image different in
    other parts of the world? What do you think
    accounts for these differences?
  • 7. How do you think fixed ideas about body shape
    size in U.S. culture influence you?
  • 8. List at least two physical features you like
    about yourself.
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