Gendered Cycles of Sexual Objectification: The Roles of Social Dominance Orientation and Perceived Social Mobility

IF 2.9 2区 社会学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL Archives of Sexual Behavior Pub Date : 2024-12-19 DOI:10.1007/s10508-024-03065-3
Rheal S. W. Chan, Kai-Tak Poon
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Abstract

Despite the high prevalence of sexual objectification, the understanding of gender differences in its victimization and perpetration remains limited. We bridged victim and perpetrator perspectives, expecting that objectification victimization positively predicts perpetration, and investigated the mediating role of social dominance orientation (SDO), and gender and perceived social mobility as moderators. Participants (valid N = 530) completed measures of sexual objectification victimization, perceived social mobility, SDO, and sexual objectification perpetration. We found that sexual objectification victimization predicted its perpetration, and that this relationship was stronger among men than women. SDO partially mediated the moderation effect of gender, whereby mediation through SDO was significant among men, but not significant among women. Moreover, a three-way interaction between sexual objectification victimization, gender, and perceived social mobility predicted SDO and carried subsequent implications for sexual objectification perpetration. Despite the mediation effect through SDO not achieving significance among women, it was significantly moderated by perceived social mobility. Specifically, the indirect effect among women with high perceived social mobility was significantly different than that among women with low perceived social mobility, but not significantly different than that among men, whose results were not influenced by perceived social mobility. This study provides a more nuanced understanding of gender in sexual objectification—specifically that gender differences may be related to social power and differences in socialization. The findings offer implications for the development of theories and clinical programs for coping with objectification victimization and preventing perpetration.

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性物化的性别循环:社会支配取向与感知社会流动的作用
尽管性物化现象非常普遍,但对其受害者和犯罪者的性别差异的理解仍然有限。我们将受害者和加害者的观点联系起来,期待物化受害对加害者的正向预测,并考察了社会支配取向、性别和感知的社会流动性作为调节因素的中介作用。参与者(有效N = 530)完成了性物化受害、感知社会流动性、SDO和性物化犯罪的测量。我们发现,性物化受害者预示着犯罪的发生,而且这种关系在男性中比女性更强。SDO部分中介了性别的调节作用,其中通过SDO的中介作用在男性中显著,在女性中不显著。此外,性物化受害、性别和感知到的社会流动性之间的三向交互作用预测了SDO,并对性物化犯罪产生了后续影响。尽管SDO的中介效应在女性中不显著,但被感知的社会流动性显著调节。具体而言,高感知社会流动性女性的间接效应与低感知社会流动性女性的间接效应显著不同,但与男性的间接效应差异不显著,后者的结果不受感知社会流动性的影响。这项研究提供了对性物化中性别的更细致的理解,特别是性别差异可能与社会权力和社会化差异有关。研究结果为应对物化受害和预防犯罪的理论和临床项目的发展提供了启示。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
13.20%
发文量
299
期刊介绍: The official publication of the International Academy of Sex Research, the journal is dedicated to the dissemination of information in the field of sexual science, broadly defined. Contributions consist of empirical research (both quantitative and qualitative), theoretical reviews and essays, clinical case reports, letters to the editor, and book reviews.
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