A Cross-Cultural Study of Body Dissatisfaction among Mexican and Mexican-American Women

abstract: ABSTRACT While the cross-cultural literature on body dissatisfaction among Mexican and Mexican-American women has continued to grow, the traditional Latino female gender role of marianismo, sociocultural factors related to ethnic culture and mainstream/American culture ideal perceive...

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Other Authors: Felix, Vitae (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.35971
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-359712018-06-22T03:06:40Z A Cross-Cultural Study of Body Dissatisfaction among Mexican and Mexican-American Women abstract: ABSTRACT While the cross-cultural literature on body dissatisfaction among Mexican and Mexican-American women has continued to grow, the traditional Latino female gender role of marianismo, sociocultural factors related to ethnic culture and mainstream/American culture ideal perceived discrepancies in body size, and one’s romantic relationship have not been explored with this population in relationship to body satisfaction. The current study included 227 female participants predominantly from a large southwestern university in the United States and a large university in northern Mexico. The study examined differences in marianismo and body satisfaction between 120 Mexican and 107 Mexican-American women, investigated the role of marianismo as a mediator between weight-related teasing and body satisfaction, and explored the relationship between marianismo, Partner Ideal Discrepancy, Ethnic Culture Ideal Discrepancy, Mainstream/American Culture Ideal Discrepancy, Perceived Weight-Related Criticism/Teasing, Relationship Support, Relationship Depth, and Relationship Conflict to overall body satisfaction. Results indicated Mexican-American women endorsed less overall body satisfaction than did their Mexican counterparts suggesting that Mexican American women may be more influenced by societal messages about thinness and beauty than are Mexican women. The findings also revealed a possible trend for marianismo as a mediator between weight-related criticism and body satisfaction. Marianismo and weight-related teasing were found to have a negative relationship with body satisfaction. Multiple regression analyses revealed that Partner Ideal and Mainstream/American Culture Ideal discrepancies accounted for significant variance in body satisfaction. Relationship Conflict accounted for a smaller but still significant amount of the variance in body satisfaction. Ethnic Culture Discrepancy, Relationship Support, and Relationship Depth were not significant predictors. These findings from this study suggest that both cultural variables and romantic relationship variables are related to the body image of Mexican American and Mexican women. These findings have important implications for the adaptation of current etiological models explaining body satisfaction among Mexican and Mexican-American women as well as highlighting the need to consider the role of both cultural and relationship variables in designing clinical interventions for Mexican American and Mexican women coping with body image concerns. Dissertation/Thesis Felix, Vitae (Author) Robinson-Kurpius, Sharon (Advisor) Arciniega, Miguel G (Committee member) Kinnier, Richard (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Psychology Counseling psychology Body dissatisfaction Body image discrepancy ideal discrepancy romantic relationship eng 142 pages Doctoral Dissertation Counseling Psychology 2015 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.35971 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2015
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology
Counseling psychology
Body dissatisfaction
Body image
discrepancy
ideal discrepancy
romantic relationship
spellingShingle Psychology
Counseling psychology
Body dissatisfaction
Body image
discrepancy
ideal discrepancy
romantic relationship
A Cross-Cultural Study of Body Dissatisfaction among Mexican and Mexican-American Women
description abstract: ABSTRACT While the cross-cultural literature on body dissatisfaction among Mexican and Mexican-American women has continued to grow, the traditional Latino female gender role of marianismo, sociocultural factors related to ethnic culture and mainstream/American culture ideal perceived discrepancies in body size, and one’s romantic relationship have not been explored with this population in relationship to body satisfaction. The current study included 227 female participants predominantly from a large southwestern university in the United States and a large university in northern Mexico. The study examined differences in marianismo and body satisfaction between 120 Mexican and 107 Mexican-American women, investigated the role of marianismo as a mediator between weight-related teasing and body satisfaction, and explored the relationship between marianismo, Partner Ideal Discrepancy, Ethnic Culture Ideal Discrepancy, Mainstream/American Culture Ideal Discrepancy, Perceived Weight-Related Criticism/Teasing, Relationship Support, Relationship Depth, and Relationship Conflict to overall body satisfaction. Results indicated Mexican-American women endorsed less overall body satisfaction than did their Mexican counterparts suggesting that Mexican American women may be more influenced by societal messages about thinness and beauty than are Mexican women. The findings also revealed a possible trend for marianismo as a mediator between weight-related criticism and body satisfaction. Marianismo and weight-related teasing were found to have a negative relationship with body satisfaction. Multiple regression analyses revealed that Partner Ideal and Mainstream/American Culture Ideal discrepancies accounted for significant variance in body satisfaction. Relationship Conflict accounted for a smaller but still significant amount of the variance in body satisfaction. Ethnic Culture Discrepancy, Relationship Support, and Relationship Depth were not significant predictors. These findings from this study suggest that both cultural variables and romantic relationship variables are related to the body image of Mexican American and Mexican women. These findings have important implications for the adaptation of current etiological models explaining body satisfaction among Mexican and Mexican-American women as well as highlighting the need to consider the role of both cultural and relationship variables in designing clinical interventions for Mexican American and Mexican women coping with body image concerns. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Counseling Psychology 2015
author2 Felix, Vitae (Author)
author_facet Felix, Vitae (Author)
title A Cross-Cultural Study of Body Dissatisfaction among Mexican and Mexican-American Women
title_short A Cross-Cultural Study of Body Dissatisfaction among Mexican and Mexican-American Women
title_full A Cross-Cultural Study of Body Dissatisfaction among Mexican and Mexican-American Women
title_fullStr A Cross-Cultural Study of Body Dissatisfaction among Mexican and Mexican-American Women
title_full_unstemmed A Cross-Cultural Study of Body Dissatisfaction among Mexican and Mexican-American Women
title_sort cross-cultural study of body dissatisfaction among mexican and mexican-american women
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.35971
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