Body Image ( IF 5.580 ) Pub Date : 2022-06-28 , DOI: 10.1016/j.bodyim.2022.06.006 Jessica T Campbell 1 , Nicole Lofaro 2 , Christine Vitiello 2 , Congjiao Jiang 3 , Kate A Ratliff 2
In the current study we move away from bias-focused, White-centric research to examine relationships between gender, race/ethnicity, and weight-related attitudes, identity, and beliefs among Black, Black/White Biracial, East Asian, Hispanic/Latino, Native American, South Asian, and White U.S. Americans who self-identify as higher weight. The results showed that: (1) women identify as fat more than men do, (2) fat identity, operationalized as feelings of similarity to fat people (self-stereotyping) and importance of weight to one’s sense of self (identity centrality) are relatively similar across races and ethnicities, and (3) fat identity and weight-related beliefs are related to positivity toward fat people across the racial/ethnic groups sampled in this study.
中文翻译:
黑人、黑人/白人混血儿、东亚裔、西班牙裔/拉丁裔、美洲原住民、南亚裔和美国白人之间的身份和体重相关信仰
在当前的研究中,我们从以偏见为中心、以白人为中心的研究转向检查黑人、黑人/白人混血儿、东亚裔、西班牙裔/拉丁裔之间的性别、种族/民族以及与体重相关的态度、身份和信仰之间的关系、美国原住民、南亚裔和自认为体重较高的美国白人。结果表明:(1)女性比男性更认同肥胖,(2)肥胖身份,可操作为与胖人相似的感觉(自我刻板印象)和体重对自我意识的重要性(身份中心性)是种族和民族之间相对相似,并且(3)肥胖认同和与体重相关的信念与本研究中抽样的种族/族裔群体对胖人的积极性有关。