The Role of Self-Objectification in the Experience of Women with Eating Disorders |
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Authors: | Rachel M. Calogero William N. Davis J. Kevin Thompson |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Psychology, The Renfrew Center Foundation, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York;(2) University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida;(3) Department of Psychology, Syracuse University, 430 Huntington Hall, Syracuse, New York, 13244 |
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Abstract: | Objectification theory has linked self-objectification to negative emotional experiences and disordered eating behavior in cultures that sexually objectify the female body. This link has not been empirically tested in a clinical sample of women with eating disorders. In the present effort, 209 women in residential treatment for eating disorders completed self-report measures of self-objectification, body shame, media influence, and drive for thinness on admission to treatment. Results demonstrated that the internalization of appearance ideals from the media predicted self-objectification, whereas using the media as an informational source about appearance and feeling pressured to conform to media ideals did not. Self-objectification partially mediated the relationship between internalized appearance ideals and drive for thinness; internalized appearance ideals continued to be an independent predictor of variance. In accordance with objectification theory, body shame partially mediated the relationship between self-objectification and drive for thinness in women with eating disorders; self-objectification continued to be an independent predictor of variance. These results illustrate the importance of understanding and targeting the experience of self-objectification in women with eating disorders or women at risk for eating disorders. |
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Keywords: | self-objectification eating disorders internalization sociocultural |
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