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Huxley, Caroline J.; Clarke, Victoria; Halliwell, Emma – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2011
Women's feelings about their body and their appearance are an important aspect of their lives, yet little is known about the ways in which partner relationships shape these feelings. There has been some debate about whether or not same-sex relationships offer protection to nonheterosexual (lesbian and bisexual) women from potentially harmful…
Descriptors: Females, Homosexuality, Empathy, Comparative Analysis
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Chrisler, Joan C. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2011
Reductionistic, misogynistic, and heterosexist views of women's bodies have been often expressed and widely shared, and psychology has not been immune to those views. Second-wave feminist psychologists had plenty of work to do to normalize and destigmatize women's bodies and to point out that cultural pressures, social constructions, and…
Descriptors: Feminism, Females, Psychologists, Health Behavior
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Lewis, Kelly M.; Robkin, Navit; Gaska, Karie; Njoki, Lillian Carol – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2011
Why do many African women continue to use damaging skin-bleaching cosmetics that contain dangerous chemicals (e.g., mercury) that may increase their rates of infertility, skin cancer, and serious skin/brain/kidney disease? To address this question, our study investigated motivations driving the preservation of skin-bleaching practices in Tanzania.…
Descriptors: Females, Diseases, Foreign Countries, Cancer
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Fredrickson, Barbara L.; Hendler, Lee Meyerhoff; Nilsen, Stephanie; O'Barr, Jean Fox; Roberts, Tomi-Ann – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2011
In this article, Barbara L. Fredrickson reflects back on two early papers--"Objectification Theory: Toward Understanding Women's Lived Experiences and Mental Health Risks" and "A Mediational Model Linking Self-Objectification, Body Shame, and Disordered Eating"--and puts them into larger context. Both papers share an unusual origin story. To tell…
Descriptors: Females, Change Agents, Human Body, Self Concept
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Chrisler, Joan C. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2011
Women's bodies have often been positioned in art and popular culture as monstrous or defiled and women's bodily products (e.g., menstrual fluid, breast milk) as disgusting. This framing has led to the stigmatization of aspects of women's bodies (e.g., leaking fluids, lumps of fat, and lines in the skin that indicate aging), especially those…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Attraction, Human Body, Feminism, Popular Culture
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Slevec, Julie; Tiggemann, Marika – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2011
The primary aim of our study was to examine the influence of media exposure on body dissatisfaction and disordered eating in middle-aged women. A sample of 101 women, aged between 35 and 55 years, completed questionnaire measures of media exposure, thin-ideal internalization, social comparison, appearance investment, aging anxiety, body…
Descriptors: Females, Eating Disorders, Periodicals, Television
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Sibley, Chris G.; Overall, Nickola C. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2011
We tested a dual process motivational model of ambivalent sexism and gender differences in intimate partner preferences. Meta-analysis of 32 samples (16 with men, 16 with women; N = 5,459) indicated that Benevolent Sexism (BS) in women was associated with greater preferences for high-resource partners (r = 0.24), whereas Hostile Sexism (HS) in men…
Descriptors: Females, Gender Discrimination, Gender Differences, Gender Bias
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Calogero, Rachel M.; Pina, Afroditi – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2011
Two studies investigated body guilt (i.e., feeling regret and remorse over how the body looks and a desire for reparative action to "fix" the body) within the framework of objectification theory among predominantly White British undergraduate women. In Study 1 (N = 225), participants completed self-report measures of interpersonal sexual…
Descriptors: Evidence, Females, Self Concept, Anxiety
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Impett, Emily A.; Henson, James M.; Breines, Juliana G.; Schooler, Deborah; Tolman, Deborah L. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2011
In a five-year longitudinal study, we investigated the role of body objectification in shaping girls' self-esteem and depressive symptoms over the course of adolescence. Multivariate Latent Growth Curve Modeling (MLGM) was used to test the association between body objectification and both self-esteem and depressive symptoms with data from 587…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Human Body, Ethnicity, Females
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Calogero, Rachel M.; Herbozo, Sylvia; Thompson, J. Kevin – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2009
Little is known about the effects of receiving compliments about appearance. An ethnically diverse sample of 220 college women completed self-report measures of appearance commentary, trait self-objectification, body surveillance, and body dissatisfaction. Results indicated that the impact of appearance criticisms and compliments, but not their…
Descriptors: Criticism, Self Concept, Interpersonal Attraction, College Students
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Henderson-King, Donna; Brooks, Kelly D. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2009
Rates of cosmetic surgery procedures have increased dramatically over the past several decades, but only recently have studies of cosmetic surgery attitudes among the general population begun to appear in the literature. The vast majority of those who undergo cosmetic surgery are women. We examined cosmetic surgery attitudes among 218…
Descriptors: Females, Self Concept, Surgery, Sociocultural Patterns
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Nowatzki, Janet; Morry, Marian M. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2009
No known research has examined women's acceptance of self-sexualizing behaviors, which includes the use of catwalks at dance clubs, taking pole dance classes, and wearing clothing with sexually suggestive statements. Structural equation modeling assessed the links between choosing sexually objectifying media, internalized appearance ideals, and…
Descriptors: Females, Structural Equation Models, Self Concept, Individual Differences
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Schick, Vanessa R.; Calabrese, Sarah K.; Rima, Brandi N.; Zucker, Alyssa N. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2010
Findings regarding the link between body image and sexuality have been equivocal, possibly because of the insensitivity of many body image measures to potential variability across sensory aspects of the body (e.g., appearance versus odor), individual body parts (e.g., genitalia versus thighs), and social settings (e.g., public versus intimate).…
Descriptors: Age, Sex Education, Females, Self Concept
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Park, Lora E.; DiRaddo, Ann Marie; Calogero, Rachel M. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2009
The present research examined the influence of parents, peers, and the media in predicting college students' Appearance-based Rejection Sensitivity (Appearance-RS)--the degree to which individuals anxiously expect to be rejected based on their physical appearance. Given that women are socialized to be more appearance-focused than men, women were…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Attitudes, Parent Influence, Rejection (Psychology)
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Siebler, Frank; Sabelus, Saskia; Bohner, Gerd – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2008
A refined computer paradigm for assessing sexual harassment is presented, validated, and used for testing substantive hypotheses. Male participants were given an opportunity to send sexist jokes to a computer-simulated female chat partner. In Study 1 (N = 44), the harassment measure (number of sexist jokes sent) correlated positively with…
Descriptors: Sexual Harassment, Computer Simulation, Gender Bias, Males
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