Summer is in full bloom. Our screens are filled with Love Island and the World Cup. Tanned, toned and athletic bodies are ubiquitous, and as we aspire to achieve these ideals, magazine stands are full of titles that promise to help us achieve beach body fitness (e.g. Men’s Health) and beauty, through a variety of exercise or diet plans. Emerging from the toxicity of popular media, are movements such as ‘I weigh‘, which has shunned conventional societal beauty demands and aims to move away from physical appearance as being a valuable determinant of self-worth. Many ‘body positive’ movements, fitness plans and media sites nonetheless still have at their core a particular physical ideal to which to aspire. Fitspo and ‘Strong is the new skinny’ (Holland & Tiggemann, 2016) strongly associate a specific narrowly defined physical ideal with good health, or fitness. In promoting strength and fitness, and departing from the traditional aesthetic of fashion media, these movements have claimed to be pro feminist. However, the founder of ‘I weigh’, actor Jameela Jamil, has criticised such movements as being “double agents for the patriarchy,” as their focus is upon a strictly delineated control of the female body (Bownass, 2018). Despite these ‘body positive’ movements rejecting recognised traditional oppressive, unattainable or enhanced notions of a physical ideal, they still promote compliance with a specific physical appearance as acceptable. In addition, association of these ideals with ‘health’ serves to strengthen the implication that non-conformity is unhealthy (Holland & Tiggemann, 2016). In promoting recognition of individual value, without incorporation of a physical determinant, movements such as ‘I weigh‘ are successfully identifying the growing recognition of the harmful physical and mental impact of media body objectification.
Ajmal Mubarik is a PhD Candidate at the Centre for Social Ethics and Policy in the University of Manchester School of Law. His research explores consent and regulation of cosmetic surgery, and the use of media and technology in healthcare.
References
Bownass, H. (2018) Jamelia Jamil gets real about periods, depression, and Kim Kardashian. The Stylist. Retrieved from https://www.stylist.co.uk/people/jameela-jamil-kim-kardashian-toxic-weight-loss-role-model-good-place-stylist-cover-story/212867
Dittmar, H. (2009). How do” body perfect” ideals in the media have a negative impact on body image and behaviors? Factors and processes related to self and identity. Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 28, 1-8.
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Holland, G. , & Tiggemann, M. (2016). “Strong beats skinny every time”: Disordered eating and compulsive exercise in women who post fitspiration on Instagram. International Journal of Eating Disorders, 50, 76-79.
Mubarik, A. (2015, December) Essena O’Neil: Sensation or sob story? The Mancunion. Retreived from http://mancunion.com/2015/12/01/essena-oneil-sensation-sob-story/
1 Symposium By Plato. Written 360 B.C.E. Translated by Benjamin Jowett. Jowett, Benjamin. The Dialogues of Plato-Vol Ii. Vol. 2. Jowett Press, 2007.↩