School of Sport, Recreation, and Tourism Management, College of Education and Human Development, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA, USA.
Counseling Program, College of Education and Human Development, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA, USA.
Ethn Health. 2024 Nov;29(8):1008-1025. doi: 10.1080/13557858.2024.2396825. Epub 2024 Aug 27.
There is a noticeable underrepresentation of Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) men in the existing empirical literature examining the sociocultural influences on body image concerns. To fill the gap, this study aimed to gain a better understanding of how sociocultural factors correlated with body dissatisfaction among BIPOC men living within the U.S.
Structural equation modeling was used to address this gap by examining how multiple sociocultural factors - interpersonal appearance pressure, media appearance pressure, ethnic-racial identity attitudes (including ethnic-racial salience, stereotype endorsement, and nationalistic assimilation) and ethnic self-hatred towards one's ethnic group - were linked to dissatisfaction with muscularity, body fat and height in a sample of 181 BIPOC men participants.
The proposed cross-sectional path model achieved satisfactory model fit and explained 31.9% in muscularity dissatisfaction, 36.2% in body fat dissatisfaction, and 26.4% in height dissatisfaction. Among direct relationships, interpersonal appearance pressure emerged most prominently associated with height dissatisfaction, whereas media appearance pressure and ethnic self-hatred were more related to muscularity and body fat dissatisfaction. Regarding the mediation effects, media appearance pressure was found to partially mediate the relationship between interpersonal appearance pressure and body dissatisfaction, as well as the relationship between ethnic self-hatred and body dissatisfaction. Furthermore, ethnic self-hatred was found to be predicted by ethnic-racial identity attitudes.
This research profoundly expands our understanding of the ethnic and racial complexities surrounding body dissatisfaction among BIPOC men and encourages health practitioners to acknowledge the unique sociocultural and systemic dynamics (ethnic-racial identities and associated stressors) when working with BIPOC men who present with body image concerns.
在现有的考察社会文化因素对身体意象关注影响的实证文献中,明显缺乏黑人和其他少数族裔男性的代表性。为了填补这一空白,本研究旨在更好地了解生活在美国的 BIPOC 男性中,社会文化因素与身体不满之间的关联。
本研究采用结构方程模型来解决这一差距,通过考察多种社会文化因素——人际外貌压力、媒体外貌压力、族裔认同态度(包括族裔凸显、刻板印象认可和民族同化)以及对自己族群的族裔仇恨——如何与 181 名 BIPOC 男性参与者的肌肉不满意、体脂不满意和身高不满意相关联。
所提出的横断面路径模型具有令人满意的模型拟合度,分别解释了肌肉不满意的 31.9%、体脂不满意的 36.2%和身高不满意的 26.4%。在直接关系中,人际外貌压力与身高不满意的关联最为突出,而媒体外貌压力和族裔仇恨与肌肉不满意和体脂不满意的关联更为密切。关于中介效应,发现媒体外貌压力部分中介了人际外貌压力与身体不满之间的关系,以及族裔仇恨与身体不满之间的关系。此外,族裔仇恨是由族裔认同态度预测的。
本研究深刻地扩展了我们对 BIPOC 男性身体不满所涉及的种族和种族复杂性的理解,并鼓励健康从业者在与出现身体意象问题的 BIPOC 男性合作时,承认独特的社会文化和系统动态(族裔认同和相关压力)。