Beauty Sick: How the Cultural Obsession with Appearance Hurts Girls and Women

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Beauty Sick: How the Cultural Obsession with Appearance Hurts Girls and Women

Beauty Sick: How the Cultural Obsession with Appearance Hurts Girls and Women

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Compliments about appearance don't actually seem to make girls and women feel better about how they look. It’s easy to forget the actual landscape of women’s appearances, because the range of what we see in media is so narrow. Perhaps as we’ve gotten older, our bodies can’t move like they used to, can’t get us from place to place, and hurt. and ” They understand that what they see isn’t real but still download apps to airbrush their selfies. Twenty-eight percent of these girls say they want their bodies to look like the women they see in movies and on television.

Dr Engeln, Professor of Psychology at Northwestern University, presents her case well, with personal classroom observation, interviews with various women and academic studies to back up her theories. Perhaps just as problematic, the extension of living in a culture of being constantly scrutinized and objectified is that it leads individuals to engage in self-objectification, which is when women internalize the near-constant attention on their appearance to the way they think about and relate to themselves and others.

For example, hearing about how people use special software to edit their photos before posting on social media made me consider doing that before posting my next photos! When I responded that I had lost weight because I’d been seriously ill, she just shrugged and said, “Well, however it happened, looks good! She makes little attempt at verifying and measuring prevalence of this condition, apart from surveys in her own classrooms.

Hemos creado una cultura que les dice a las mujeres que lo más importante que pueden conseguir es ser guapas. In fact, Engeln (2017) presents some startling statistics when she reports that one study found that 34% of 5-year old girls engage in deliberate dietary restraint at least sometimes.To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average.

Engeln (2017) exposes the hypocrisy and mixed messages of this same culture that simultaneously preaches girl power and empowerment, while also relentlessly reminding girls that their femininity and sense of worth is wrapped up in their appearance.Quindi complimenti vivissimi alla HarperCollins italiana e ai geni che hanno seguito la traduzione di questo libro, e se potete e siete abbastanza ferrati nella lingua comprate la versione inglese. Beauty Sick takes a particular focus on the thinness ideal, as it is similarly associated with catastrophic effects for women, including negative body-image issues, taking extreme measures to try to attain this unattainable ideal, etc.



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