socitey's influence on women and thier appearance-oreinted illnesses
Women are the most affected group of appearance-oriented illnesses. They are constantly trying to meet the ideal yet unattainable standards of body image that our society has so strongly set forth. This paper gives an overview of the introduction of bodily standards for women in American society and discusses the ongoing and seemingly never ending campaign for perfection. Most, if not all, researches find that women are the targeted group for crises dealing with self-image. They are constantly being put on a pedestal and compared to an ideal that may not even actually exist. Women go on diets and work out all the time. They're never thin enough, so they go to unnatural extremes. All they really want is to feel good about themselves in a sea of doubt and turmoil produced by a multi- billion-dollar-a-year beauty industry. And they think the panacea is to look like a supermodel: perfectly thin, tall, sculpted, and commanding- our cultural epitome of feminine success. (Zimmerman 61) For over a century, newspapers and magazines have been inundating Americans with images of ideal beauty. Only strict emulation of these ideals has been accepted as attractive. In the earl
Women once again began to feel too fat. Disordered eating and low self-image tends to run in families: a mother's behavior strongly influences her daughter, and studies show that mothers who place much emphasis on their daughters' weight and appearance increase the risk that their daughters will develop and eating disorder (O'Neill 41). "Let's Become Our Own Best Friend!" Seventeen November 1980: 158-160. Thinness, however, is always relative. Denver, Colorado: Living Quest Publishing, 1993. We seem to be so busy wishing our figures were a perfect size five that we forget there is beauty in individuality. Eating Disorders: Anorexia and Bulimia. That in turn would help our society change it's attitudes and standards. Dear Cherry: Questions and Answers on Eating Disorders. This ideal was first replaced in the 1890's with the introduction of the Gibson girl, created by an artist. Models not only had to be super skinny, but also ".
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