Granberg Ellen M, Simons Leslie Gordon, Simons Ronald L
Department of Sociology & Anthropology 132 Brackett Hall Clemson University Clemson SC 29634 864-656-3812
Youth Soc. 2009 Dec 1;41(2):256-277. doi: 10.1177/0044118X09338505.
Social psychologists have amassed a large body of work demonstrating that overweight African American adolescent girls have generally positive self-images, particularly when compared with overweight females from other racial and ethnic groups. Some scholars have proposed that elements of African American social experience may contribute to the maintenance of these positive self-views. In this paper, we evaluate these arguments using data drawn from a panel study of socio-economically diverse African American adolescent girls living in Iowa and Georgia. We analyze the relationship between body size and social self-image over three waves of data, starting when the girls were 10 years of age and concluding when they were approximately 14. We find that heavier respondents hold less positive social self-images but also find that being raised in a family that practices racial socialization moderates this relationship.
社会心理学家积累了大量研究成果,表明超重的非裔美国少女总体上具有积极的自我形象,尤其是与其他种族和族裔群体的超重女性相比。一些学者提出,非裔美国人社会经历的某些因素可能有助于维持这些积极的自我看法。在本文中,我们使用来自对居住在爱荷华州和佐治亚州、社会经济背景多样的非裔美国少女进行的一项面板研究的数据来评估这些观点。我们分析了在三波数据中身体大小与社会自我形象之间的关系,数据起始于女孩10岁时,结束于她们大约14岁时。我们发现,体重较重的受访者持有不太积极的社会自我形象,但也发现,在一个实行种族社会化的家庭中成长会缓和这种关系。