Appalachian State University, Boone, North Carolina, United States.
Body Image. 2014 Jan;11(1):63-7. doi: 10.1016/j.bodyim.2013.08.001. Epub 2013 Sep 7.
Sociocultural norms pertaining to an ideal of thinness for women likely play a role in the development and maintenance of disturbance in body image, and by extension, disordered eating. However, competing norms associated with feminism may buffer women from pressures associated with achieving the thin ideal. The present study explored the relationship between feminist ideology, empowerment, and self-efficacy relative to body image and eating behavior with a sample of U.S. undergraduate women (N=318) attending a southeastern U.S. mid-sized university. In planned hierarchical multiple regression analyses, endorsement of feminist ideology predicted perceptions of positive body image, but did not appear to predict disordered eating. Self-efficacy emerged as a robust predictor of positive body image and lower disordered eating even after controlling for perceptions of personal empowerment and feminism. Results, although limited by correlational data, suggest that self-efficacy may protect college-aged women from disordered eating and negative body image.
与女性理想身材相关的社会文化规范可能在身体意象障碍的发展和维持中发挥作用,进而导致饮食失调。然而,与女权主义相关的竞争规范可能会减轻女性在追求理想身材方面所面临的压力。本研究以美国东南部一所中型大学的女本科生(N=318)为样本,探讨了女权主义意识形态、赋权和自我效能感与身体意象和饮食行为之间的关系。在计划的分层多元回归分析中,对女权主义意识形态的认可预测了对积极身体意象的认知,但似乎并未预测饮食失调。即使在控制了个人赋权和女权主义的认知后,自我效能感仍然是积极身体意象和较低饮食失调的有力预测因素。结果虽然受到相关数据的限制,但表明自我效能感可能会保护大学年龄段的女性免受饮食失调和消极身体意象的影响。