新唯物主义对身体失调、性别与健康和健身社交媒体的分析:你不应该与任何人比较......但每个人都在这样做

Youth Pub Date : 2024-05-19 DOI:10.3390/youth4020047
Emma Rich
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摘要

最近的研究记录了社交媒体对 "理想"、"健美 "身材的宣传与身体形象及相关身体问题和状况之间的关系。本文扩展了这一学术研究,特别关注性别、身体不满意度和社交媒体。迄今为止,人们大多从心理学的角度来理解对身体的不满,将其视为个人内心的一种病态,并因媒体形象的内化而与不良身体形象密切相关。在本文中,我借鉴了女权主义新唯物主义的观点,将对身体的反感归结为一种关系现象。本文借鉴了在英格兰开展的一项混合方法研究,该研究有 1000 多名年轻人参与,考察了他们使用一系列数字健康技术的体验。我特别关注他们与社交媒体的互动,以探索理想形象与身体问题之间的关系。对自己身体的负面看法或形象并不是一个简单的内化过程,而是通过身体与社交媒体和其他元素的复杂纠缠过程形成的。我概述了不认同是如何作为各种元素(包括话语、人类、身体、数字对象和平台)组合的一部分而具体化的。本文揭示了与社交媒体的纠缠如何产生强大的影响,如羞耻感、愉悦感和性别归属感,这可能会对年轻人与其身体的关系产生重大影响。我分析了以 "改造 "身体为重点的社交媒体活动是如何产生强大影响的,这些影响以深刻的性别化方式,有时甚至是有害的方式,打开或限制了 "男孩 "或 "女孩 "身体的能力。
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A New Materialist Analysis of Body Disaffection, Gender and Health and Fitness Social Media: ‘You Shouldn’t Compare Yourself to Anyone... but Everyone Does’
Recent research has documented the relationship between the promotion of ‘ideal’, ‘fit’ bodies in social media, body image and associated body concerns and conditions. This article expands this scholarship, focusing specifically on gender, body dissatisfaction and social media. Thus far, body disaffection has mostly been understood through a psychological framing, as a pathology residing within an individual and strongly associated with poor body image because of internalizing media images. In this paper, drawing on feminist new materialism, I offer a framing of body disaffection as a relational phenomenon. The paper draws on a mixed method study in England, with over 1000 young people examining their experiences with a range of digital health technologies. I focus specifically on their engagement with social media, to explore the relationship between ideal images and body concerns. Far from being a simple process of internalization of negative perceptions or image one has of their body, disaffection is formed through the body via a complex process of entanglement with social media and other elements. I outline how disaffection materialises as part of an assemblage of elements, including discourses, humans, bodies, digital objects and platforms. The paper reveals how entanglements with social media can generate powerful affects such as shame, pleasure and belonging along gendered lines, which may have significant implications for young people’s relationships with their bodies. I analyse how social media events focused on the ‘transformation’ of bodies generate powerful affects, which open or limit capacities for what ‘boys’ or ‘girls’ bodies might become in deeply gendered and sometimes harmful ways.
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