The effect of thin and average-sized models on women’s appearance and functionality satisfaction: Does pose matter?

Body Image ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 32 ◽  
pp. 128-135 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kate E. Mulgrew ◽  
Kate Schulz ◽  
Odette Norton ◽  
Marika Tiggemann
Keyword(s):  
2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eriko Ambo ◽  
Hitomi Abe ◽  
Yuka Sekiguchi ◽  
Kaneo Nedate

Sister Style ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-17
Author(s):  
Nadia E. Brown ◽  
Danielle Casarez Lemi

This chapter provides the theoretical and methodological framework for the book. We show how Black women’s appearance is not just a personal decision—it also has political implications. The chapter argues for the importance of contextualizing Black women’s bodies as part of their political experiences, and it provides a broad overview of the book.


2019 ◽  
Vol 58 (4) ◽  
pp. 677-683
Author(s):  
Alexandra Shepard ◽  
Tim Stretton

AbstractThis introduction places the articles featured in this special issue of the Journal of British Studies within the context of recent scholarship on late medieval and early modern women and the law. It is designed to highlight the many boundaries that structured women's legal agency in Britain, including the procedural boundaries that filtered their voices through male advisers and officials, the jurisdictional boundaries that shaped litigation strategies, the constraints surrounding women's appearance as witnesses in court, the gendered differentiation of rights determined by primogeniture and marital property law, and the boundaries between legal and extralegal activity. Emphasizing the importance of a nuanced approach, it rejects the construction of women's litigation simply as a form of resistance to patriarchal norms and also urges caution against overestimating or oversimplifying the choices available to women in legal disputes or their latitude to operate as autonomous individuals. Gender intersected in British courts with locality, resources, jurisdiction, social status, and familial, religious, and political affiliations to inform different women's access to justice, which involved negotiations between unequal actors within various constraints and in complex alignment with multiple and often competing interests.


2007 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 213
Author(s):  
Patricia Franco Espírito Santo ◽  
Elisabeth Meloni Vieira

RESUMONo Brasil o aborto é uma das grandes causas de internação hospitalar, e, segundo alguns autores, as contribuições deste fenômeno ao obituário materno parecem estar ligadas às condições de atendimento. Supondo que as percepções dos profissionais envolvidos no atendimento influenciam sua prática, conhecê-las se faz uma tarefa importante. Este artigo refere-se a um estudo qualitativo que teve como objetivo desvelar as percepções de um grupo de profissionais de saúde que se deparam no seu dia-a-dia com mulheres em situação de abortamento. Como critério de seleção para participação na pesquisa, os profissionais necessitavam ter atendido a casos de resoluções obstétricas e pertencer a uma das seguintes categorias profissionais: médico (M), enfermeiro (E) e auxiliar de enfermagem (AE). Foram entrevistados 12 profissionais e utilizou-se também como fonte de coleta de dados o diário de campo. A pesquisa obedeceu à Resolução 196/96 da Comissão de Ética em Pesquisa do Ministério da Saúde. Utilizou-se a análise de conteúdo do tipo temática como técnica. Das entrevistas emergiram seis categorias temáticas. Através da análise, os profissionais categorizam o tipo de abortamento, espontâneo ou provocado, de acordo com o sofrimento da mulher; sentem dificuldades em lidar com os aspectos emocionais do abortamento; os que defendem a restrição do aborto se baseiam em argumentos religiosos, os que defendem a expansão dos critérios para sua descriminalização e liberação usam como argumento a necessidade de melhorar a saúde das mulheres; os profissionais sentem-se inseguros a respeito dos conhecimentos éticos e legais do aborto e revelam-se despreparados para abordar os aspectos emocionais das pacientes.Descritores: Aborto; Saúde sexual e reprodutiva; Pesquisa qualitativa.    ABSTRACTAbortion is one of the major causes of hospitalization in Brazil. According to some authors, its contribution to maternal mortality seems to be related to the health care. Making the assumption that the health professional’s perceptions on abortion influence their practice, to know them is important. This paper presents a qualitative study that aimed to reveal the perception on abortion of a group of health professionals that cope with women’s health their everyday practice. As a selection criteria to the participation in the study the health professionals must had experience in obstetrics cases and to belong to one of these categories: doctor, nurse or nurse assistant. A total of 12 professionals were interviewed and a fieldwork diary records was used. The study followed the Resolution 196/96 of the Ethical Commission of the Brazilian Ministry of Health. A thematic content analysis was used to data analysis. Six categories were drawn from the interviews: the health professionals classifies abortion or miscarriage according to women’s appearance of suffering; they felt difficult to cope with the emotional aspects of abortion; those who defended restriction to abortion are based on religious arguments; those who defended decriminalization used as argument the need to improve  women’s health; they felt insecure regarding the ethical and legal aspects of abortion and revealed unprepared to approach emotional need of the patients with abortion.     Descriptors: Abortion; Reproductive and sexual health; Qualitative research. RESUMENEn Brasil, el aborto es una de las principales causas de hospitalización, y, según algunos autores, las contribuciones de éste fenómeno a la mortalidad materna parecen estar relacionadas a las condiciones de la atención. Presumiendo que las percepciones de los profesionales involucrados en la atención influyen su práctica, conocerlas es una tarea importante. Este artículo se refiere a un estudio cualitativo cuyo objetivo fue desvelar las percepciones de un grupo de profesionales de la salud que diariamente se encuentran con mujeres en situación de aborto. Como criterio de selección para la participación en la investigación, los profesionales tenían que haber atendido casos de resoluciones obstétricas y pertenecer a una de las siguientes categorías profesionales: médico (M), enfermero (E) e auxiliar de enfermaría (AE). Fueran entrevistados 12 profesionales y se utilizó para la recolección de los datos el diario de campo. La investigación obedeció a la Resolución 196/96 de la Comisión de Ética en investigación del Ministerio de la Salud. Como técnica se utilizó un análisis de contenido de tipo temática. Surgieron seis categorías temáticas de las entrevistas. Mediante el análisis, los profesionales categorizaron el tipo de aborto, espontáneo o provocado, de acuerdo con el sufrimiento de la mujer; sienten dificultades para enfrentar los aspectos emocionales del aborto; los que defienden la restricción del aborto se basan en argumentos religiosos, los que defienden la ampliación de los criterios para su descriminalización y liberación argumentan la necesidad de mejorar la salud de las mujeres; los profesionales se sienten inseguros respecto a los conocimientos éticos y legales del aborto y revelan falta de preparación para abordar a los aspectos emocionales de las pacientes.Descriptores: Aborto; Salud sexual y reproductiva; Investigación cualitativa. 


Author(s):  
Jaime Schultz

This chapter looks at how a number of milestones peppered the era as women experienced unprecedented participation opportunities. But with that progress came the “backlash” of the 1980s, a reaction to women's athletic progress that particularly manifested in the aesthetic fitness movement. Within the context of the neoconservative “Reagan revolution,” women flocked to all sorts of bodywork designed to sculpt their physiques in physically and sexually attractive ways and, in the process, forged a “new ideal of beauty.” The chapter argues that this trend is indicative what Naomi Wolf calls the “beauty myth,” in which the accent on women's appearance detracts from their social, cultural, political, and economic status.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 473-481 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sophia Choukas-Bradley ◽  
Jacqueline Nesi ◽  
Laura Widman ◽  
M. K. Higgins

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document