The Influence Of Body Shaming

894 Words2 Pages

America the beautiful? Or America the superficial? This question refers to how America has become enamored with physical appearances due to this overwhelming pressure from society to achieve the “perfect body.” We seek to achieve this aesthetic because society correlate having ideal body with the rewards of being attractive, successful, and acceptance by society. Body shaming is a never ending cycle that remains constant in society by media factors of celebrity influence, advertisements, and social media.
The people we see on our television, radios, and magazine have the immense power to influence opinion and enable action. It is human nature that people are drawn to thoughts, feelings, and action of celebrities; they are social catalysts. …show more content…

It is clear that social media is most influential towards our young generation, which is why I believe this is how body shaming has spread to our generation. The argument is made that importance of looks in American society is negatively effecting on our new generation. Our nation’s children are being raised around the concept of body-shaming, which is altering our children’s. Being slim has increasingly become our children’s biggest social pressure as childhood obesity is associated with negative social and psychological consequences during childhood that could affect them into adulthood (ex. bullying.) For example, Critic Renee Hobbs states that due to the contributions of mass media messages, females, in particular, begin putting an emphasis on physical appearance from an increasing younger and younger age: “Finding a young woman who is never worried about her weight is almost as impossible as finding a magic pill that melts fat overnight.”(Hobbs) Research has proven that worldwide the increase in negative eating behaviors, such as anorexia and bulimia among adolescents has been directly proportional to the increase in advertisements for weight-loss products from 1994 to 2002. (Hobbs) For example, critic Nick Fox cites the underground movement of the

Open Document