Smoothies, bone broth, and fitspo: the historicity of TikTok postpartum bounce-back culture.

IF 1.2 3区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Medical Humanities Pub Date : 2024-08-14 DOI:10.1136/medhum-2023-012830
Bethany L Johnson, Margaret M Quinlan, Audrey Curry
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Abstract

TikTok, a now iconoclastic social media platform, hosts millions of videos on health, wellness and physical fitness, including content on postpartum wellness and 'bouncing back'. At present, few studies analyse the content of postpartum videos urging viewers to bounce-back or the potential influence of these videos. Given the acknowledged relationship between social media use and adverse mental health outcomes (eg, lowered self-esteem, increased stress, disordered eating risk), an investigation of bounce-back-related postpartum content on TikTok explores important intersections between wellness and fitness cultures and the embodied experience of postpartum recovery. Using a qualitative thematic analysis of bounce-back videos (n=175), we explore three themes: (1) Smoothies: eat, but don't be fat; (2) Bone broth: bounce-back with today's wellness trends; (3) Fitspo: moving your body matters. Importantly, videos recycle historically constructed thinking about what makes a 'good' or 'bad' body, invoke vintage diet-culture tropes (ie, drinking water to fill up before eating), and maintain potentially dangerous expectations for caregivers rooted in historical gender, race and class constructs. This results in a postfeminist mishmash of modern maternity practices and traditional hierarchies. Unpacking the historicity of TikTok content assists health practitioners, scholars and users in understanding the potential impacts of video content on new parents, as well as how to flag and contextualise potentially harmful content. Future studies should examine other TikTok subcultures, including teen mothers and trans parents, and explore the messaging directed at and the impact on those communities.

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冰沙、骨头汤和健身饮料:TikTok 产后反弹文化的历史性。
TikTok 是一个具有标志性的社交媒体平台,拥有数百万个关于健康、保健和健身的视频,其中包括关于产后保健和 "反弹 "的内容。目前,很少有研究分析产后视频中敦促观众反弹的内容或这些视频的潜在影响。鉴于社交媒体的使用与不良心理健康结果(如降低自尊、增加压力、饮食失调风险)之间的关系已得到公认,对 TikTok 上与产后反弹相关内容的调查探索了健康和健身文化与产后恢复的体现性体验之间的重要交集。通过对反弹视频(n=175)进行定性主题分析,我们探讨了三个主题:(1)冰沙:吃,但不要胖;(2)骨头汤:反弹与当今的健康趋势;(3)Fitspo:移动你的身体很重要。重要的是,视频循环利用了历史上关于什么是 "好 "或 "坏 "身体的建构思维,引用了饮食文化的老套路(即在进食前喝水来填饱肚子),并保持了植根于历史上性别、种族和阶级建构的对护理人员的潜在危险期望。这就造成了现代孕产实践与传统等级制度的后女权主义混杂。解读 TikTok 内容的历史性有助于健康从业者、学者和用户了解视频内容对初为父母者的潜在影响,以及如何标记潜在的有害内容并将其与具体情况相结合。未来的研究应考察 TikTok 的其他亚文化,包括未成年母亲和变性父母,并探讨针对这些群体的信息传递及其影响。
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来源期刊
Medical Humanities
Medical Humanities HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
8.30%
发文量
59
期刊介绍: Occupational and Environmental Medicine (OEM) is an international peer reviewed journal concerned with areas of current importance in occupational medicine and environmental health issues throughout the world. Original contributions include epidemiological, physiological and psychological studies of occupational and environmental health hazards as well as toxicological studies of materials posing human health risks. A CPD/CME series aims to help visitors in continuing their professional development. A World at Work series describes workplace hazards and protetctive measures in different workplaces worldwide. A correspondence section provides a forum for debate and notification of preliminary findings.
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