In defense of the body: the effect of mortality salience on female body objectification
In defense of the body: the effect of mortality salience on female body objectification
Previous research has illustrated the negative psychological consequences of female body objectification. The present study explores how female body objectification may serve as a defense against unconscious existential fears. Drawing from terror management theory, an experiment was designed to test the potential functionality of female body objectification. Men and women were primed to think about either their own mortality or an aversive control topic, and levels of body objectification were then assessed for both self- and other (women)-objectification. Findings supported the hypothesis that priming mortality would increase both self- and other-objectification among women, and self-objectification among those who derive self-esteem from their body. Implications for this research are discussed.
33-37
Grabe, Shelly
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Routledge, Clay
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Cook, Alison
d61f2bbd-3a20-42cb-b162-42a34af9a41d
Anderson, Christie
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Arndt, Jamie
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2005
Grabe, Shelly
95040cd5-251b-40fb-8889-ef6aaf59141c
Routledge, Clay
c1e0088a-3cc4-4d54-bbd3-de7d286429d8
Cook, Alison
d61f2bbd-3a20-42cb-b162-42a34af9a41d
Anderson, Christie
2d6ccd59-fbfe-4983-8317-22f351987dfa
Arndt, Jamie
9f74041c-58f9-43b5-96f1-19dda49b7d87
Grabe, Shelly, Routledge, Clay, Cook, Alison, Anderson, Christie and Arndt, Jamie
(2005)
In defense of the body: the effect of mortality salience on female body objectification.
Psychology of Women Quarterly, 29 (1), .
(doi:10.1111/j.1471-6402.2005.00165.x).
Abstract
Previous research has illustrated the negative psychological consequences of female body objectification. The present study explores how female body objectification may serve as a defense against unconscious existential fears. Drawing from terror management theory, an experiment was designed to test the potential functionality of female body objectification. Men and women were primed to think about either their own mortality or an aversive control topic, and levels of body objectification were then assessed for both self- and other (women)-objectification. Findings supported the hypothesis that priming mortality would increase both self- and other-objectification among women, and self-objectification among those who derive self-esteem from their body. Implications for this research are discussed.
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Published date: 2005
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Local EPrints ID: 40161
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/40161
ISSN: 0361-6843
PURE UUID: 7c1d2b8d-4d1d-4411-86cd-2521dcb98eaf
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Date deposited: 03 Jul 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 08:17
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Author:
Shelly Grabe
Author:
Clay Routledge
Author:
Alison Cook
Author:
Christie Anderson
Author:
Jamie Arndt
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