Social Media And Body Image Essay

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How does social media use influence people’s body image? The practice of social media has erupted drastically throughout the past decade. Millennials and even grandparents are all well versed in the age of technology and the discoveries of social media. From Snapchat and Facebook, and even finding employment on sites like LinkedIn; social media has completely consumed the twenty-first century and the culture of social media that has begun to develop from it. Even though social media has many advantages towards making daily tasks easier to cope with, there are, however, many disadvantages to a world that is completely consumed by virtual reality and how people perceive others online. The topic of body image among today’s youth has become not …show more content…

Her family has over a half a billion people followers that watch their every move, every fashion trend, and every cosmetic endeavor that they pursue. The Kardashian clan has the ability to change social norms and influence others with a single click of a but to their millions of followers. They are able to make others feel like “participants in virtual [world that are] able to experience “becoming someone else” through the design and manipulation of their avatars by altering parts of their self-concept and relationships with other people, if only for a brief time” (Becarra, 2008). The Kardashians, unknowingly, are shaping societal norms through Albert Bandura’s Social Behavior Theory. Individuals are absorbing what the Kardashian’s are posting online, and they are observing and modeling what they are seeing. For example, the researchers at Texas State University- San Marcos developed the “Ugly duckling by day, super model by night: The influence of body image on the use of virtual worlds” study. This study looked at the correlation between vitural influences and real world influences on people’s body image. This study found that, “Body image (i.e., self-perceptions of physical appearance) is as important in virtual worlds as it is in the real world because virtual worlds are social networking places and, thus, social acceptance is desired” (Becarra, 2008). The …show more content…

From social media, television, magazines and billboards, there is never a lot of diversification among the faces that grace the media on a daily basis. As a community, many people have become conditioned to believe that these women are what society has normalized as “beautiful.” Their body’s and faces are “perfect” and people have begun to try to emulate these women to become what society believes as “beautiful” too. According researchers at various universities, “Media also explicitly instruct how to attain thin bodies by dieting, exercising, and body contouring surgery, encouraging female consumers to believe that they can and should be thin (Yamamiya, 2004). Although, even thought this women think that by altering their bodies to societies standards, they are actually contributing to the fact that “an idealization of thinness is positively correlated with body image dissatisfaction” (Yamamiya, 2004). In this study, one hundred and twenty-three white women at Old Dominion University were exposed to media featuring women who were considered to be “beautiful.” They were first told to fill out Thompson’s questionnaire and then they the women were spilt into two groups where there were shown the pieces of media. The study should that individuals in the control group had higher internalization of the media than the individuals in the alternate group. Ultimately, researchers found that the only what to alter the way the way that

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