Thornborrow Tracey, Onwuegbusi Tochukwu, Mohamed Sophie, Boothroyd Lynda G, Tovée Martin J
School of Psychology, College of Social Science, University of Lincoln, Lincoln, United Kingdom.
Department of Psychology, Durham University, Durham, United Kingdom.
Front Psychol. 2020 Apr 3;11:495. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00495. eCollection 2020.
An increasing number of studies are evidencing relationships between the drive for muscularity and potentially harmful behavioral strategies, such as unhealthy dieting and steroid use amongst men in WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, Democratic) populations. As such Western appearance standards proliferate around the world via the media, men who live in other cultural contexts are also at risk of potentially negative effects from aspiring to the "muscular ideal." However, few studies have explored these relationships in non-WEIRD populations. We investigated men's body ideals and body image in two non-WEIRD, non-White populations, Uganda (Africa) and Nicaragua (Central America), and compared them with an ethnically diverse sample of men in the United Kingdom. We also examined whether socio-cultural factors including media and ethnicity, predicted the drive for muscularity and body change behaviors among our participants. Results showed that Ugandan men had the least desire for muscularity relative to men in the United Kingdom. Supporting the Tripartite model we found that media and peer influences significantly predicted the drive for muscularity, particularly among men from White British and Nicaraguan Miskitu ethnic groups. By contrast, Creole / Garifuna and Mestizo men from Nicaragua were more likely to want to increase muscularity relative to Black African men from Uganda. Overall, our findings support previous research in demonstrating that there are cultural differences in the kind of body men desire, and that men from WEIRD and non-WEIRD populations may experience similar pressures to aspire to and attain a muscular body type.
越来越多的研究表明,在西方、受过教育、工业化、富裕、民主(WEIRD)人群中的男性里,追求肌肉发达与潜在有害的行为策略之间存在关联,比如不健康节食和使用类固醇。随着西方的外貌标准通过媒体在全球范围内传播,生活在其他文化背景下的男性也有可能因追求“肌肉理想型”而受到负面影响。然而,很少有研究在非WEIRD人群中探究这些关系。我们调查了乌干达(非洲)和尼加拉瓜(中美洲)这两个非WEIRD、非白人人群中男性的身体理想和身体形象,并将其与英国一个种族多样的男性样本进行比较。我们还研究了包括媒体和种族在内的社会文化因素是否能预测我们参与者中追求肌肉发达和身体改变行为的倾向。结果显示,相对于英国男性,乌干达男性对肌肉发达的渴望最低。支持三方模型的是,我们发现媒体和同伴影响显著预测了追求肌肉发达的倾向,尤其是在英国白人男性和尼加拉瓜米斯基托族男性中。相比之下,尼加拉瓜的克里奥尔/加里富纳人和梅斯蒂索男性比乌干达的非洲黑人男性更有可能想要增加肌肉量。总体而言,我们的研究结果支持了之前的研究,即表明男性所期望的身体类型存在文化差异,并且来自WEIRD和非WEIRD人群的男性在渴望并获得肌肉体型方面可能会面临类似的压力。