The present paper reports preliminary results of a pibt study carried out on two samples of females living in two different European countries. The onset of eating disorders is considered to result from females' difficulties in developing a genderspecific identity in a specific social context that p
The impact of context on gender social identities
โ Scribed by Agustin Echebarria Echabe; Jose Luis Gonzalez Castro
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 157 KB
- Volume
- 29
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0046-2772
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
What follows is a quasi-experimental study aiming to analyse the inยฏuence of the social division of roles (especially the division between public and private spheres of activity) on gender social identities. Subjects were asked to describe themselves as well as their images of the perfect or ideal person' in the context of their professional activities or their close relationships. The order of presentation (self-description and the description of the perfect person') was balanced. We found that women and men perceived themselves according to the traditional gender stereotypes (women perceived themselves as more feminine while men describe themselves as more masculine). However the context in which subjects imagined themselves aected their self-perceptions as well as their images of the ideal person': A public context (professional activity) elicited more masculine self-images in women and men whereas private contexts (close relationships) led to more feminine images of themselves. Furthermore, the images of the perfect person' varied according to which context was salient: these images were more masculine in the public context and more feminine in the private one. Finally, the asymmetry hypothesis in social comparison was conยฎrmed. Although there was a sig-niยฎcant correlation between self-images and the image of the perfect or ideal person', this correlation was stronger when subjects described themselves ยฎrst and described their images of the ideal person' before. This result was interpreted as reยฏecting the subjects' tendency to see themselves as prototypes in the social comparison.
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