Styling the Self: Clothing Practices, Personality Traits, and Body Image Among Israeli Women

Research has shown that women tend to use clothes to present or disguise their bodies and that clothing practices can be predicted by body image. This study explored the relationships between clothing practices, personality traits, and body image among Israeli women, using the Big Five personality t...

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Main Author: Tali Stolovy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-09-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.719318/full
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spelling doaj-2485a9a3306c447a8bef80137df464672021-09-08T05:00:20ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782021-09-011210.3389/fpsyg.2021.719318719318Styling the Self: Clothing Practices, Personality Traits, and Body Image Among Israeli WomenTali Stolovy0Tali Stolovy1Academic College of Society and the Arts, Netanya, IsraelEmili Sagol Creative Arts Therapies Research Center, Faculty of Social Welfare and Health Sciences, University of Haifa, Haifa, IsraelResearch has shown that women tend to use clothes to present or disguise their bodies and that clothing practices can be predicted by body image. This study explored the relationships between clothing practices, personality traits, and body image among Israeli women, using the Big Five personality traits model (NEO-FFI) and a body image measure (MBSRQ) to explore clothing styles and practices among Israeli women (N = 792, Mean age = 42.19). It found that women with are more openness to experience (OR = 1.8; IC 95%: 1.05–3.0), who seek fashion (OR = 2.05; IC 95%: 1.37–3.05) and individuality (OR = 3.96; IC 95%: 2.46–6.3) are more likely to exhibit a urban, sophisticated style of dress. These women are less motivated by comfort (OR = 0.49; IC 95%: 0.31–0.77) and camouflage (OR = 2.05; IC 95%: 1.37–3.05), that are associated with casual, minimalist style of dress. This study indicates that openness to experience may foster body-positive clothing practices. In this way, their choice of clothing can help women overcome objectification and cultural body-ideal pressures, promoting self-validation and mastery.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.719318/fullpersonality traitsbody imagewomen–clothingclothing stylesclothing practices
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tali Stolovy
Tali Stolovy
spellingShingle Tali Stolovy
Tali Stolovy
Styling the Self: Clothing Practices, Personality Traits, and Body Image Among Israeli Women
Frontiers in Psychology
personality traits
body image
women–clothing
clothing styles
clothing practices
author_facet Tali Stolovy
Tali Stolovy
author_sort Tali Stolovy
title Styling the Self: Clothing Practices, Personality Traits, and Body Image Among Israeli Women
title_short Styling the Self: Clothing Practices, Personality Traits, and Body Image Among Israeli Women
title_full Styling the Self: Clothing Practices, Personality Traits, and Body Image Among Israeli Women
title_fullStr Styling the Self: Clothing Practices, Personality Traits, and Body Image Among Israeli Women
title_full_unstemmed Styling the Self: Clothing Practices, Personality Traits, and Body Image Among Israeli Women
title_sort styling the self: clothing practices, personality traits, and body image among israeli women
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Research has shown that women tend to use clothes to present or disguise their bodies and that clothing practices can be predicted by body image. This study explored the relationships between clothing practices, personality traits, and body image among Israeli women, using the Big Five personality traits model (NEO-FFI) and a body image measure (MBSRQ) to explore clothing styles and practices among Israeli women (N = 792, Mean age = 42.19). It found that women with are more openness to experience (OR = 1.8; IC 95%: 1.05–3.0), who seek fashion (OR = 2.05; IC 95%: 1.37–3.05) and individuality (OR = 3.96; IC 95%: 2.46–6.3) are more likely to exhibit a urban, sophisticated style of dress. These women are less motivated by comfort (OR = 0.49; IC 95%: 0.31–0.77) and camouflage (OR = 2.05; IC 95%: 1.37–3.05), that are associated with casual, minimalist style of dress. This study indicates that openness to experience may foster body-positive clothing practices. In this way, their choice of clothing can help women overcome objectification and cultural body-ideal pressures, promoting self-validation and mastery.
topic personality traits
body image
women–clothing
clothing styles
clothing practices
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.719318/full
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